tldr: Tricentis Tosca certification comes in two main levels: AS1 (Automation Specialist Level 1) and AS2 (Automation Specialist Level 2). AS1 costs approximately €150 and is often available free via voucher through Tricentis Academy MOOCs. Useful if your employer requires it or you want to stand out on the job market. For most engineers, hands-on experience matters more.


Certification levels

Tricentis offers two certification levels for Tosca:

AS1 (Automation Specialist Level 1)

  • Entry-level certification
  • Covers core Tosca concepts, module creation, test case design, and execution
  • Prerequisites: completion of Tricentis Academy foundational courses
  • Format: online proctored exam
  • Duration: approximately 60-90 minutes
  • Pass rate: not publicly disclosed, but generally considered achievable with preparation

AS2 (Automation Specialist Level 2)

  • Advanced certification, the final step to becoming a certified Test Automation Specialist
  • Covers complex automation scenarios, API testing, data-driven testing, and Tosca best practices
  • Prerequisites: AS1 certification plus advanced Academy courses
  • Format: online proctored exam with practical components
  • Duration: approximately 90-120 minutes

Additional certification levels beyond AS2 include TDS, Engineer, and Architect tracks for deeper specialization.


What AS1 certification covers

The AS1 exam tests your knowledge across these domains:

  1. Tosca Commander basics. Workspace structure, project organization, and navigation
  2. Module creation. Scanning applications, creating and editing modules, managing module attributes
  3. Test case design. Building test cases from modules, test configuration parameters, execution lists
  4. Test data. Using test data sheets, parameterization, and data-driven testing basics
  5. Execution. Running tests locally and on distributed agents, reading execution logs
  6. Reporting. Understanding test results, pass/fail analysis, and basic troubleshooting

The exam is multiple-choice with scenario-based questions. You won't be asked to build anything live in Tosca, but you need to understand the workflows well enough to answer practical questions.


Certification cost

ItemEstimated cost
AS1 exam fee~€150 (often free via MOOC voucher)
AS2 exam fee~€150
Tricentis Academy courses (free online)€0
Instructor-led training (optional)Quote-based (contact Tricentis)
Retake fee~50-100% of original exam fee

The Academy's online courses are free and sufficient for AS1 preparation. Tricentis regularly offers free exam vouchers through their MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) sessions, so you can often get AS1 certified at zero cost.

Exact pricing varies by region and availability. Contact Tricentis or your local testing partner for current rates.


How to prepare

Step 1: Complete Tricentis Academy courses

Start with the free online courses on Tricentis Academy. The AS1 learning path includes:

  • Introduction to Tosca
  • Module design fundamentals
  • Test case creation
  • Data-driven testing
  • Execution and reporting basics

Budget 20-40 hours for the full learning path.

Step 2: Get hands-on practice

Theory alone won't prepare you. You need to build modules, create test cases, and run tests. If your employer has a Tosca license, use it. If not, request a free trial from Tricentis to get practice time.

Step 3: Review exam guide

Tricentis publishes an exam guide with topic weightings. Focus your study time on heavily weighted sections.

Step 4: Take practice exams

Tricentis Academy offers practice questions. Third-party sites also provide mock exams. Don't rely exclusively on brain dumps. Understanding the concepts matters more than memorizing answers.


Is Tricentis Tosca certification worth it?

It's worth it if:

  • Your employer uses Tosca and values or requires certification
  • You're applying for QA roles at enterprises that run Tosca
  • You want formal validation of your Tosca skills for career advancement
  • You're a consultant and certification builds credibility with clients

It's probably not worth it if:

  • You're not planning to work with Tosca specifically
  • You want to learn test automation broadly (Playwright or Selenium certifications are more transferable)
  • Your team is moving toward AI-native testing tools
  • You're a startup engineer who needs practical skills over credentials

The job market tells the story. Tosca roles are concentrated in large enterprises, particularly in Europe and APAC. If that's your target market, certification is a signal that hiring managers recognize.

For engineers exploring the broader testing market, investing time in open-source frameworks (Playwright, Cypress) or AI-native platforms provides more career flexibility.


Certification vs. practical experience

A certification proves you completed a course and passed an exam. It doesn't prove you can architect a test automation framework, debug a failing test suite, or make trade-off decisions about what to automate.

Hiring managers at Tricentis shops will check the box for AS1. But they'll weight interview performance and real project experience more heavily. The best candidates have both.

If you're investing in QA career development, split your time. Get certified if Tosca is in your current or next role. But also build practical skills with modern tools. The testing industry is shifting toward AI-native platforms that generate and maintain tests automatically. Understanding that shift matters for long-term career planning.


FAQs

What is Tricentis Tosca AS1 certification?

AS1 (Automation Specialist Level 1) is the entry-level Tricentis Tosca certification. It covers core Tosca concepts including module creation, test case design, execution, and reporting. It's the entry point for the Tosca certification path, which extends through AS2, TDS, Engineer, and Architect levels.

How much does Tricentis Tosca certification cost?

The AS1 and AS2 exams each cost approximately €150. Tricentis often provides free exam vouchers through their MOOC sessions, so AS1 certification can be obtained at zero cost. Tricentis Academy courses for preparation are free online.

How long does it take to get Tosca certified?

Plan for 4-8 weeks of part-time study. The Tricentis Academy online courses take 20-40 hours. Add another 10-20 hours for hands-on practice and exam preparation. Full-time dedicated study can compress this to 2-3 weeks.

Is Tricentis Tosca certification recognized globally?

Yes. Tricentis certification is recognized by enterprises worldwide, particularly in Europe, APAC, and large US corporations. It's most valuable in organizations that already use Tosca. For general QA roles, ISTQB or tool-agnostic certifications may be more universally recognized.

Can I get Tosca certified without a Tosca license?

You can study the theory through free Tricentis Academy courses. For hands-on practice, Tricentis offers a free community/training edition and a 14-day trial. You can also check if your employer or training partner provides lab access.