Quick Answer: CMMC certification requirements are the cybersecurity controls defense contractors must implement to handle controlled unclassified information (CUI) and qualify for Department of Defense contracts. For most contractors, this means meeting CMMC Level 2 requirements, including 110 security controls aligned with NIST SP 800-171.
CMMC certification requirements are the security controls and practices your organization must implement to handle Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) and bid on Department of Defense contracts.
At Level 2, the most common certification target for defense contractors, that means 110 requirements across 14 control families, all aligned with NIST SP 800-171. Meeting these requirements involves technical controls, documentation, staff training, and a third-party assessment every three years.
This page breaks down what the requirements actually cover, where organizations typically get stuck, and what your options are for getting compliant before the DoD's end-of-2026 deadline.
CMMC stands for Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification. It is a DoD program that requires defense contractors and subcontractors to demonstrate they protect CUI at a defined security level before they can win or renew federal contracts.
There are three certification levels:
The 14 control families at Level 2 map directly to NIST SP 800-171:
|
Control Family |
Abbreviation |
|
Access Control |
AC |
|
Awareness and Training |
AT |
|
Audit and Accountability |
AU |
|
Configuration Management |
CM |
|
Identification and Authentication |
IA |
|
Incident Response |
IR |
|
Maintenance |
MA |
|
Media Protection |
MP |
|
Personnel Security |
PS |
|
Physical Protection |
PE |
|
Risk Assessment |
RA |
|
Security Assessment |
CA |
|
System and Communications Protection |
SC |
|
System and Information Integrity |
SI |
Each family contains specific practices your organization must implement, document, and demonstrate to a Certified Third-Party Assessment Organization (C3PAO). The DoD has set the end of 2026 as the deadline for CMMC compliance to appear in active contract solicitations, which means the clock is already running.
Most defense contractors underestimate what CMMC Level 2 actually demands until they are deep into the process. The requirements look manageable on paper, but implementation surfaces a different reality.
Getting compliant is not just about checking boxes. It requires coordinated work across your technical environment, your documentation library, and your people. The sections below cover the four areas where organizations spend the most time and resources.
If you process or store CUI in standard Microsoft 365, you need to migrate to a FedRAMP-authorized environment before you can satisfy CMMC Level 2 requirements. GCC High is the most common target for defense contractors handling export-controlled data. This migration affects email, SharePoint, Teams, and any connected applications, and it requires careful planning to avoid data loss or productivity disruption.
CMMC assessors don't just verify that controls are in place. They verify that your organization has written policies, procedures, and plans that govern how those controls are used. This includes a System Security Plan (SSP), a Plan of Action and Milestones (POA&M), an Incident Response Plan, and more. BEMO creates 18-plus IT policies during implementation to cover these requirements.
Implementing 110 controls requires a security stack that covers endpoint protection, identity management, logging, vulnerability management, and data protection. Each tool must be properly configured and producing evidence that your assessor can review. Choosing the wrong tools or misconfiguring them adds months to your timeline.
CMMC Level 2 certification lasts three years, but your compliance posture must be maintained continuously. That means 24/7 log monitoring, regular vulnerability patching, annual security awareness training, and quarterly reviews of your security program. Gaps that appear between assessments can jeopardize your next certification cycle.
There is no single right way to pursue CMMC certification. The right approach depends on your internal resources, your timeline, and your risk tolerance. Here is an objective look at the three most common paths.
|
DIY / In-House |
GRC Platform Only (Drata, Vanta) |
Managed Compliance Partner |
|
|
Implementation |
Your team builds it |
Platform guides you, you do the work |
Partner builds it for you |
|
Ongoing maintenance |
Your team |
Your team + automation |
Partner's team + automation |
|
Auditor coordination |
You manage it |
Limited support |
Managed end-to-end |
|
Tech stack |
You select and configure |
Integrations only |
Full security stack deployed |
|
Dedicated team |
Your hires ($84K-$132K+ per person) |
None |
Multi-role team assigned to your account |
|
Typical timeline |
12-18+ months |
6-12 months |
~8 months initial implementation |
The DIY path gives you maximum control but requires hiring, onboarding, and retaining specialized staff across IT, security, and compliance. A GRC platform reduces documentation overhead but still leaves implementation and assessor coordination to your team. A managed compliance partner takes ownership of the full process, which is a meaningful difference when your contract eligibility is on the line.
If you are ready to pursue CMMC certification, here is the process BEMO uses with every client.
The challenges covered above are real, and they are the same ones BEMO was built to solve. BEMO is a Cyber AB Registered Practitioner Organization (RPO) that has made CMMC compliance a core part of its managed services offering for defense contractors.
Here is what sets BEMO apart:
The end-of-2026 DoD deadline is not moving. BEMO assigns a dedicated team to your account, deploys your full security stack, and owns the outcome of your certification.
Book a meeting with BEMO to start with a GAP assessment and get your implementation roadmap.
CMMC Level 2 requires implementing 110 security practices across 14 control families, all drawn from NIST SP 800-171. You must also document your practices in a System Security Plan, address any gaps in a Plan of Action and Milestones, and pass a third-party assessment conducted by a C3PAO. The assessment must be repeated every three years to maintain certification.
CMMC Level 2 requires 110 controls across 14 control families. These controls cover everything from access management and multi-factor authentication to incident response, audit logging, and media protection. BEMO manages 251 CMMC-related controls across its client implementations, accounting for the full depth of documentation and technical evidence each requirement demands.
The realistic timeline for CMMC Level 2 certification is 8 to 18 months, depending on your current security posture and whether you need to migrate to GCC or GCC High. Organizations starting from a weak baseline or running on non-compliant cloud environments should plan for the longer end of that range. Working with a managed compliance partner typically compresses the timeline to around 8 months.
A GAP assessment evaluates your current environment against all 110 CMMC Level 2 requirements and identifies which controls you have in place, which are partially implemented, and which are missing entirely. It also covers your documentation posture and your cloud environment's compliance status. The output is a prioritized remediation roadmap, not just a list of findings.
CMMC certification requires expertise across cloud migration, security tooling, policy development, and assessor coordination. A managed compliance partner brings all of that to your account from day one, without the 3-to-6-month ramp-up of a new hire. For defense contractors with contract deadlines tied to the end-of-2026 federal requirement, speed and certainty matter more than any other factor.
BEMO assigns a dedicated team to every client: a Customer Success Manager, Project Manager, Delivery Engineer, Security Engineer, SOC Analyst, IT Manager, Support Engineer, and virtual CISO. That team owns the outcome of your compliance program, not just the advice. Quarterly virtual CISO reviews and bi-weekly implementation status meetings keep your program on track throughout.