SOC 2 Type 1 vs Type 2: Complete Comparison
Quick Answer
SOC 2 Type 1 tests design at a point in time (fast, lower cost). SOC 2 Type 2 tests operating effectiveness over 3-12 months (slower, higher cost, required by enterprises). Start with Type 1 if you need speed; plan for Type 2 for long-term sales.
The Simple Explanation
SOC 2 Type 1
What it tests: Are your security controls designed properly at a specific point in time?
Timeframe: Single day (point-in-time snapshot)
What auditor checks: "Do you have the right controls in place? Are they designed to meet the Trust Service Criteria?"
SOC 2 Type 2
What it tests: Are your controls designed properly AND do they work effectively over time?
Timeframe: Observation period (3-12 months)
What auditor checks: "Do you have the right controls? Are they working consistently? Can you prove they operated throughout the audit period?"
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Type 1 | Type 2 |
|---|---|---|
| What it proves | Controls are designed properly | Controls are designed AND operating effectively |
| Timeframe | Point-in-time (single day) | Period of time (3-12 months) |
| Timeline | 3-8 months | 6-20 months |
| Cost | $12K-$160K | $15K-$450K |
| Evidence required | Policies, designs, screenshots | All Type 1 evidence + proof of operation over time |
| Customer acceptance | 50-60% of enterprise customers | 90-95% of enterprise customers |
| Best for | Early-stage, speed-focused, budget-limited | Enterprise sales, most common requirement |
Type 1 Deep Dive
What Type 1 Tests
Type 1 evaluates whether your controls are suitably designed to meet the Trust Service Criteria. The auditor reviews:
- Written policies and procedures
- System configurations and settings
- Control design documentation
- Screenshots and architecture diagrams
What Type 1 DOESN'T test:
- Whether controls actually work
- Whether you follow your policies consistently
- How controls perform under real-world conditions
- Control effectiveness over an extended period
Type 1 Costs
- Specialist auditors: $12K-$40K
- Regional auditors: $15K-$50K
- Mid-tier auditors: $20K-$65K
- Big Four auditors: $40K-$160K
Type 1 Timeline
- Preparation: 1-3 months (implement controls, write policies)
- Auditor engagement: 2-4 weeks (get quotes, negotiate)
- Audit execution: 2-4 weeks (evidence collection, testing)
- Report issuance: 2-3 weeks (draft review, final report)
Total: 3-8 months
When to Choose Type 1
- Speed is critical: You need certification in 3-6 months
- Limited budget: $15K-$40K vs $20K-$75K for Type 2
- Stepping stone strategy: Get Type 1 now, Type 2 in 6-12 months
- Early-stage proof: Demonstrate security maturity to investors or partners
- Customer accepts it: Specific customer only requires Type 1 (rare)
Type 2 Deep Dive
What Type 2 Tests
Type 2 evaluates both design and operating effectiveness. Everything from Type 1, plus:
- Controls operated throughout observation period (3-12 months)
- Evidence of consistent control operation (logs, tickets, reports)
- Exceptions and deficiencies identified and addressed
- Control changes tracked and documented
Observation period requirements:
- Minimum 3 months (rarely accepted by customers)
- Standard 6 months (common for first audit)
- Preferred 12 months (enterprise preference, rolling coverage)
Type 2 Costs
- Specialist auditors: $15K-$75K
- Regional auditors: $20K-$95K
- Mid-tier auditors: $30K-$120K
- Big Four auditors: $60K-$450K
Type 2 Timeline
- Preparation: 2-4 months (implement controls, write policies)
- Auditor engagement: 2-4 weeks (get quotes, negotiate)
- Observation period: 3-12 months (controls must operate consistently)
- Testing and fieldwork: 3-6 weeks (auditor tests evidence)
- Report issuance: 3-5 weeks (draft review, final report)
Total: 6-20 months (typically 9-14 months)
When to Choose Type 2
- Enterprise sales: 90%+ of enterprise customers require Type 2
- Competitive advantage: Type 2 beats competitors with Type 1 only
- Long-term value: Type 2 remains valid for 12 months vs Type 1's limited shelf life
- Security maturity: Demonstrates real operational excellence, not just policy
- Investor/acquirer requirements: Due diligence almost always requires Type 2
Real-World Customer Preferences
Research from 500+ RFPs (2025):
- Fortune 500 companies: 98% require Type 2
- Mid-market enterprises (500-5000 employees): 85% require Type 2, 15% accept Type 1
- SMB customers (under 500 employees): 60% require Type 2, 40% accept Type 1
- Public sector/government: 95% require Type 2
- Financial services: 99% require Type 2
- Healthcare: 90% require Type 2
Bottom line: If you're selling to enterprise (1000+ employees), plan for Type 2. Type 1 might get you in the door, but you'll need Type 2 to close.
The Stepping Stone Strategy
Many companies do Type 1 first, then Type 2 6-12 months later. Here's how:
Step 1: Type 1 (Months 1-6)
- Implement all necessary controls
- Document policies and procedures
- Complete Type 1 audit
- Use Type 1 report for early-stage prospects
Step 2: Observation Period (Months 6-12)
- Continue operating controls consistently
- Collect evidence of ongoing operation
- Fix any issues discovered during Type 1
- Leverage Type 1 report while working toward Type 2
Step 3: Type 2 Upgrade (Months 12-15)
- Engage auditor for Type 2 testing
- Use 6-month observation period (or longer)
- Complete Type 2 report
- Replace Type 1 with Type 2 for all prospects
Cost savings: Many auditors credit 40-60% of Type 1 cost toward Type 2 if done within 12 months.
Evidence Requirements Comparison
Type 1 Evidence
One-time snapshots:
- Current security policies (v1.0)
- Screenshot of MFA settings (today)
- Current firewall rules
- List of current employees with production access
- Network diagram (as-is)
- Current vendor list
Type 2 Evidence
Everything from Type 1, plus ongoing operational evidence:
- Access reviews: Quarterly reviews throughout observation period
- Vulnerability scans: Monthly scans with remediation tracking
- Backup logs: Daily backup success logs for entire period
- Change tickets: All production changes with approvals
- Training records: Proof of security training completion
- Background checks: Completed checks for new hires during period
- Incident logs: All security incidents (or attestation of zero incidents)
- Vendor reviews: Annual vendor risk assessments
Internal effort:
- Type 1: 150-300 hours
- Type 2: 300-600 hours (due to ongoing evidence collection)
Exceptions and Findings
Type 1 Exceptions
If auditor finds control design issues in Type 1:
- Minor issues: Document in report, remediate, retest
- Major issues: May delay report until controls are properly designed
- Impact: 2-4 week delay typically
Type 2 Exceptions
If auditor finds operating effectiveness issues in Type 2:
- Minor exceptions: Missed 1-2 access reviews, late patches (documented exceptions in report)
- Material exceptions: Controls not operating consistently (qualified opinion, unacceptable to customers)
- Impact: Must remediate and potentially extend observation period
Type 2 is harder to pass because you must prove consistent operation over months. One missed control test = exception.
Report Validity Period
Type 1 Report Lifespan
- Technical validity: Only valid for the audit date (single day)
- Practical acceptance: Customers typically accept for 6-12 months
- Shelf life: Short — must upgrade to Type 2 or re-audit within a year
Type 2 Report Lifespan
- Technical validity: Covers observation period (e.g., Jan 1 - Dec 31, 2025)
- Practical acceptance: Customers accept until report is 12-15 months old
- Shelf life: Longer — annual surveillance maintains continuous coverage
Continuous coverage strategy: Do annual Type 2 audits with rolling 12-month observation periods for uninterrupted certification.
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Type 1 ROI
- Cost: $15K-$40K (specialist auditor)
- Time to value: 3-6 months
- Customer acceptance: 50-60% of enterprises
- Best for: Unblocking SMB deals, early proof of security
Type 2 ROI
- Cost: $20K-$75K (specialist auditor)
- Time to value: 6-12 months
- Customer acceptance: 90-95% of enterprises
- Best for: Enterprise sales, long-term value, competitive advantage
Break-even calculation:
- Incremental cost: $10K-$35K (Type 2 vs Type 1)
- Value: Accept 40% more deals (those requiring Type 2)
- If you close 1 additional $100K deal, Type 2 pays for itself 3x over
Common Questions
Can I upgrade from Type 1 to Type 2 mid-year?
Yes. Complete Type 1, then immediately begin observation period for Type 2. Most auditors will credit 40-60% of Type 1 cost if you upgrade within 12 months.
Will customers accept a 3-month Type 2 report?
Rarely. While AICPA allows 3-month minimum observation periods, most enterprise customers prefer 6-12 months. A 3-month report often raises questions about why you didn't go longer.
Do I need Type 2 if I'm just starting out?
It depends. If you're selling to SMBs and need certification quickly, Type 1 works. If your pipeline includes enterprise prospects (Fortune 5000), go straight to Type 2 — don't waste time on Type 1.
Can I switch auditors between Type 1 and Type 2?
Yes, but you lose the upgrade discount. Switching auditors means starting fresh and paying full Type 2 price. If you plan to upgrade, commit to one auditor for both.
What happens after the first audit?
Annual surveillance audits. Most companies do annual Type 2 audits to maintain continuous coverage. Cost is typically 60-70% of initial audit.
Decision Framework
Choose Type 1 if:
- You need certification in under 6 months
- Budget is very limited ($15K-$25K)
- Selling primarily to SMBs who accept Type 1
- Using as proof of concept for investors/partners (not customers)
- Planning to upgrade to Type 2 within 12 months
Choose Type 2 if:
- Selling to enterprise customers (strongly recommended)
- You can afford $20K-$75K and 9-12 month timeline
- You want long-term value and broad customer acceptance
- Security maturity and operational excellence matter
- You're doing this once and want to do it right
Our recommendation for 80% of companies: Go straight to Type 2 with a 6-12 month observation period. The incremental cost ($10K-$35K) is worth the broad customer acceptance and long-term value.
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Related articles: SOC 2 Pricing Guide • SOC 2 Timeline • How to Choose an Auditor