Cisco 500-220 Exam Prep Course (Premium File)
AI-Powered Cisco Meraki Solutions Specialist Exam - Pass on Your First Try

Last updated on Jun 09, 2026

 500-220 Practice Exam
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500-220 Package
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Last Updated: 09-Jun-2026
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All Cisco Meraki Solutions Specialist certification learning material, study guide, training courses are created by a team of Cisco training experts. The Study Guide and .EXM training software files contain relevant Cisco Meraki Solutions Specialist content, labs, practice questions and explanation. This 500-220 exam guide and training courses is based on the latest exam outlines available!

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How to Prepare and Pass the Cisco® 500-220 Exam

Are you aspiring to become a certified Cisco® engineer? The Cisco® 500-220 exam is an essential step towards achieving your goal. This article aims to provide you with accurate and up-to-date information about the exam, as well as actionable tips to help you prepare effectively and increase your chances of success.

About the Cisco® 500-220 Exam

The Cisco® 500-220 exam, also known as the Engineering Cisco Meraki Solutions (ENMSDW) exam, is designed to assess your knowledge and skills in deploying, designing, and managing Cisco Meraki solutions. By passing this exam, you demonstrate your proficiency in implementing Meraki wireless, switching, security, and SD-WAN technologies.

Exam Details

  • Exam Code: 500-220 ENMSDW
  • Exam Duration: 90 minutes
  • Exam Format: Multiple-choice questions (single and multiple answers), drag-and-drop, and simulation-based questions
  • Exam Cost: The cost may vary depending on your region. Please refer to the official Cisco® website for the most accurate and up-to-date pricing information.

Exam Topics

The Cisco® 500-220 exam covers various topics related to Cisco Meraki solutions. It is important to have a solid understanding of these subjects before taking the exam. The following are the key exam topics:

  • Meraki Architecture and Dashboard
  • Wired and Wireless LAN Configuration
  • Security and Firewall Configuration
  • Meraki SD-WAN Configuration
  • Monitoring and Troubleshooting

Preparing for the Cisco® 500-220 Exam

Effective preparation is crucial for passing the Cisco® 500-220 exam. Here are some actionable tips to help you prepare:

1. Understand the Exam Objectives

Thoroughly review the exam topics and ensure you have a clear understanding of what each objective entails. This will guide your study plan and help you allocate sufficient time to cover all the necessary areas.

2. Utilize Official Cisco® Resources

Take advantage of the official resources provided by Cisco®. The Cisco® website offers study materials, practice exams, and documentation that align with the exam objectives. Familiarize yourself with these resources and incorporate them into your study routine.

3. Join Cisco® Learning Communities

Engage with the Cisco® learning community to gain valuable insights and support from fellow learners and experts. Participate in forums, discussion boards, and social media groups dedicated to Cisco® certifications. This interaction can provide additional study resources and help clarify any doubts you may have.

4. Hands-on Practice

Meraki solutions require practical experience for mastery. Set up a lab environment or leverage online sandbox platforms to gain hands-on experience with Cisco Meraki products. Practice configuring wireless networks, implementing security measures, and troubleshooting various scenarios. This practical exposure will enhance your understanding of the concepts and boost your confidence.

5. Take Practice Exams

Attempt practice exams to assess your knowledge and identify areas that require further attention. The Cisco® website provides official practice tests, which can simulate the exam environment and give you a sense of the question formats and difficulty level. Analyze your performance in these practice exams and focus on improving your weaker areas.

6. Create a Study Schedule

Establish a study schedule that suits your learning style and commitments. Allocate dedicated time for studying each exam objective, and maintain a balance between theoretical learning and hands-on practice. Adhering to a structured study plan will help you stay organized and cover all the necessary topics effectively.

7. Review and Revise

As the exam date approaches, review all the topics comprehensively. Summarize key concepts, create flashcards for quick revision, and reinforce your understanding through repetition. Focus on understanding the underlying principles rather than memorizing isolated facts.

8. Stay Calm and Confident

On the day of the exam, stay calm and trust in your preparation. Get a good night's sleep, have a healthy meal, and arrive at the exam center early. Read each question carefully during the exam, manage your time effectively, and answer to the best of your knowledge.

Conclusion

Preparing for and passing the Cisco® 500-220 exam requires dedication, a structured study plan, and hands-on experience. By following the actionable tips provided in this article and leveraging the official Cisco® resources, you can enhance your knowledge and increase your chances of success. Remember, thorough preparation and a confident mindset are key to achieving your certification goals.

Best of luck with your Cisco® 500-220 exam!

Cisco

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Question 108:

  • Correct answer: A

  • Why: A flat internal cloud network means all hosts can reach each other and any public-facing storage may be exposed. Implementing segmentation with ACLs restricts which networks/hosts can access sensitive file storage, reducing exposure and limiting blast radius.

  • Why not the others:
- B (logging/monitoring to SIEM) helps detect issues but doesn’t prevent exposure caused by a flat network. - C (MFA for cloud storage) improves authentication but doesn't address insecure network access to storage. - D (IDS) detects threats after they occur and doesn’t restrict access to the sensitive locations.

Lagos, Nigeria

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Question 82:
I can’t view the [Image] in Log entries. If you paste the text of Log entry 1–4 or describe the payloads, I can identify which shows the exploitation.
In general, for a zero-day command injection, look for:

  • Log entries showing input that appears to be passed to a shell or OS command (e.g., attempts to execute ls, whoami, uname -a, or wget/curl from a web input).
  • Use of command metacharacters in user input (e.g., ;, &, |, $(), ${...}, backticks).
  • HTTP requests with suspicious query strings or POST bodies that include shell-like commands or encoded payloads.
  • Unexpected process creation or web server issuing OS commands (e.g., new /bin/sh or cmd.exe spawned).

How to decide which is evidence:
  • Compare entries for evidence of command execution originating from user input.
  • Check for anomalies that shouldn’t be possible from normal traffic (rare file writes, new executables, or outbound connections triggered by web input).
  • Correlate with timing and any known vulnerability active window.

If you share the actual logs, I’ll pinpoint which one indicates exploitation and explain why.

Lagos, Nigeria

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Question 12:
Correct answer: D. Exploitation

  • In the Cyber Kill Chain, the stages are:
- Reconnaissance: gather information - Weaponization: prepare the exploit - Delivery: transmit the payload - Exploitation: exploit the vulnerability to gain access
  • In this scenario, the attacker gained access to the internal network via social engineering. Since they have already turned the vector into access, they are at the Exploitation stage.

  • Why not the others:
- Reconnaissance: before attack, not after access is gained - Weaponization: preparation work done before delivery - Delivery: sending the payload, which would precede how access is gained
Note: "Doesn’t want to lose access" points toward persistence actions, but among the given options, Exploitation best fits the current stage.

Lagos, Nigeria

VirtuLearn AI

Question 3:

  • Answer: C: Configure an Access-Control-Allow-Origin header to authorized domains.

Why: The output likely indicates a CORS misconfiguration. CORS controls which origins can make cross-origin requests to your web app. By setting Access-Control-Allow-Origin to specific, trusted domains, you prevent unauthorized sites from reading or interacting with your resources.
Why the other options are less appropriate:
  • Set an HttpOnly flag to force communication by HTTPS: HttpOnly affects cookie ??????? via client-side scripts, not transport security. HTTPS enforcement is done with TLS, not HttpOnly.
  • Block requests without an X-Frame-Options header: X-Frame-Options mitigates clickjacking, not cross-origin data access.
  • Disable the cross-origin resource sharing header: This would remove restrictions and increase exposure; you should restrict origins, not disable CORS.

Lagos, Nigeria

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UTM STANDS FOR
Unified Threat Management.
It’s an integrated security appliance that combines multiple controls (e.g., firewall, IDS/IPS, antivirus/malware scanning, VPN, content filtering) to protect the network perimeter.

Rosedale, United States

VirtuLearn AI

Question 332:

  • The correct answer is: B. Reimage the end user's machine.

  • Why: The SOC has a live indication of a potential compromise (remote control, credential-like data). In incident response, containment/eradication takes precedence to stop malware persistence and possible exfiltration. Reimaging quickly cleans the host so you’re not just “mitigating” by changing credentials.

  • About the assumption: It isn’t that the compromise is fully confirmed or all evidence is already collected. The scenario describes suspicious activity that warrants immediate containment to reduce risk. Evidence collection can occur after containment.

  • Why not the others:
- A: Advising password changes is remediation for credential theft, but not the immediate containment needed if the host is compromised. - C: Checking the personal email policy addresses policy, not incident containment. - D: Checking host firewall logs is diagnostic and not the first action when a suspected remote-control compromise is identified.
  • Practical nuance: If feasible, you might quickly gather volatile data (RAM, running processes) before reimage, but the exam’s best-practice choice prioritizes containment/eradication first.

Rosedale, United States

VirtuLearn AI

Question 382:

  • Correct answer: C — Inability of a plan subscriber to locate and access fee information for nearby participating service providers.

  • Why: The stated capabilities focus on helping subscribers find providers in their vicinity (real-time maps/GPS, search by postal code or radius) and, critically, enable downloading the fee schedule for those providers. Requirements 7–11 directly support locating providers and retrieving their fee information. While directions (B) are useful, the primary business need driven by the enhancements is to locate nearby providers and access their fee information (C). Options A and D refer to provider-to-provider alerts or provider awareness of subscribers, which are not the primary goals of these enhancements.

  • Note: The problem statement’s official answer in this page shows D, which does not align with the described capabilities. The explanation above aligns the needs with the subscriber-centered benefits.

Yevlakh, Azerbaijan

VirtuLearn AI

Question 116:

  • Correct answer: IPSec

  • Why: IPSec provides security at the IP layer by authenticating and encrypting each IP packet in transit, giving confidentiality, integrity, and authenticity for data moving within the private cloud (e.g., site-to-site or host-to-host VPNs).

  • Why not the others:
- SHA-1: a hashing algorithm, not encryption; does not protect confidentiality and is insecure. - RSA: an asymmetric algorithm used for key exchange or signatures, not by itself to secure all traffic. - TGT: a Kerberos authentication artifact, not a method for protecting data in transit.

Johannesburg, South Africa

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Question 33:

  • Correct concept: The Weather.Historic entity corresponds to the text "by month" in the utterance.

  • Why: The sample export shows the entity spans characters 23 to 31, and the substring in that span is "by month." In LU/LUIS, an entity's value is the exact text matched in the utterance; startIndex/endIndex (or startPos/endPos in older versions) indicate where that text appears.

  • Key takeaway: Weather.Historic is the phrase "by month" extracted from the user input, not the numeric value or a separate label. The positions illustrate where the entity text is located within the utterance.

Singapore, Singapore

VirtuLearn AI

Question 61:

  • Correct answer: Run the Bot Framework Emulator.

  • Why: When you start a bot locally, the Emulator is the standard tool to validate and debug your bot without publishing it. It lets you connect to your local endpoint (e.g., http://localhost:3978/api/messages), send test messages, inspect requests/responses, and verify dialogs and state.

  • What to expect: You can test conversation flows, activities, and debugging traces, ensuring the bot behaves as intended before connecting to any Azure channels.

  • Why the other options aren’t correct for this step:
- Bot Framework Composer is for designing and managing bot flows, not the primary local validation step before connecting to the bot. - Register the bot with Azure Bot Service is for deployment to Azure channels, not for initial local validation. - Run Windows Terminal is just a command shell and does not validate bot functionality.

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