Quick Answer: NIST SP 800-171 defines 110 security requirements across 14 control families that protect Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) in non-federal systems. If you handle CUI as a defense contractor or federal supplier, these requirements apply to your organization. Meeting them is a prerequisite for many government contracts and directly feeds into CMMC Level 2 compliance.
NIST 800-171 requirements cover everything from access control and incident response to system and communications protection. The full scope is 110 requirements organized into 14 control families, and meeting them demands technical controls, documented policies, and ongoing operational discipline across your entire organization. This page breaks down what the requirements cover, where organizations typically struggle, what it realistically takes to get compliant, and how to decide on the right approach for your business.
NIST SP 800-171, published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, defines the security requirements that non-federal organizations must meet when they process, store, or transmit Controlled Unclassified Information. The current version, NIST SP 800-171 Revision 3, was finalized in 2024 and aligns closely with CMMC Level 2.
The 110 requirements are grouped into 14 control families. Each family addresses a specific security domain, and all 110 requirements apply. There is no tiered or optional subset.
|
Control Family |
Requirement Focus |
|
Access Control (AC) |
Limit system access to authorized users and processes |
|
Awareness and Training (AT) |
Train personnel on security risks and responsibilities |
|
Audit and Accountability (AU) |
Log, review, and protect system activity records |
|
Configuration Management (CM) |
Establish and maintain secure baseline configurations |
|
Identification and Authentication (IA) |
Verify identities before granting system access |
|
Incident Response (IR) |
Detect, report, and recover from security incidents |
|
Maintenance (MA) |
Control and monitor system maintenance activities |
|
Media Protection (MP) |
Protect and sanitize media containing CUI |
|
Personnel Security (PS) |
Screen personnel and manage termination procedures |
|
Physical Protection (PE) |
Control physical access to systems and CUI |
|
Risk Assessment (RA) |
Identify, evaluate, and address security risks |
|
Security Assessment (CA) |
Periodically assess controls and document findings |
|
System and Communications Protection (SC) |
Protect data in transit and monitor network boundaries |
|
System and Information Integrity (SI) |
Detect malicious code and monitor system security alerts |
If you are pursuing CMMC Level 2 certification, these 110 requirements form the foundation of that assessment. You can read more about how the two frameworks compare in this CMMC vs NIST 800-171 breakdown.
Most organizations underestimate what full compliance actually involves. The 110 requirements look manageable on paper, but implementation touches every layer of your IT environment, your people, and your processes.
Here are the most common pain points:
Getting to a defensible compliance posture requires work across four distinct areas. None of them can be skipped, and all of them require sustained attention after the initial implementation is done.
You need a System Security Plan (SSP) that documents every control, how it is implemented, and who is responsible for it. If any controls are not yet in place, you also need a Plan of Action and Milestones (POA&M) that tracks your remediation progress. BEMO creates 18 or more IT policies during implementation, covering everything from acceptable use to incident response procedures.
NIST SP 800-171 cybersecurity requirements touch your identity management, endpoint configuration, network monitoring, encryption, and backup systems. Deploying multi-factor authentication, configuring least-privilege access, enabling audit logging, and protecting CUI at rest and in transit all require deliberate configuration across your entire environment. A Microsoft-native stack using Entra ID, Intune, Defender, and Sentinel covers a significant portion of these controls.
NIST 800-171 compliance requirements are not satisfied once and forgotten. You need continuous monitoring of system activity, regular vulnerability scans, and a process for reviewing and responding to security alerts. A 24/7 SOC that reviews logs and escalates verified threats is the standard for organizations serious about maintaining their compliance posture.
The Awareness and Training control family requires that all personnel understand their security responsibilities and receive role-based training. This means documented training completion records, regular refresher cycles, and a process for onboarding new employees into your security awareness program. Tools like KnowBe4 automate much of this, but someone still needs to manage the program and track completion.
There is no single right answer for how to pursue NIST SP 800-171 compliance. The right approach depends on your internal resources, timeline, and budget. Here is an honest comparison of 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 |
|
Starting cost |
$84K-$132K+/year (one hire) |
$10K-$30K/year (platform only) |
~$4,800/month (full service) |
The DIY path gives you full control but requires hiring qualified staff across IT, security, and compliance. A GRC platform accelerates documentation and evidence collection but still puts the implementation work on your team. A managed compliance partner takes on the full scope, from tooling to auditor coordination, with a dedicated team that owns the outcome.
If you are weighing these options, this article on common compliance mistakes covers the pitfalls that trip up organizations across all three approaches.
If you are ready to move forward, the process follows four clear steps.
1. Book a GAP Assessment: Start by evaluating your current security posture against all 110 NIST 800-171 requirements. This identifies which controls are in place, which are missing, and where your highest-risk gaps are. You cannot build a realistic plan without this baseline.
2. Get Your Implementation Roadmap: Based on the GAP assessment, you will receive a prioritized plan covering which controls to address first, what tooling you need, which policies to develop, and a realistic timeline for getting to a defensible compliance posture.
3. Deploy Controls: This is the hands-on phase. Security controls go live, your environment gets configured, GRC automation is set up, and documentation is built out. This phase typically runs six to eight months for organizations starting from a low baseline.
4. Achieve and Maintain Compliance: Once your controls are in place and documented, you move into ongoing compliance. This includes regular monitoring, policy updates, assessor coordination, and quarterly reviews to make sure your posture stays current as your environment changes.
The challenges covered above, from tool selection to continuous monitoring to assessor coordination, are exactly what BEMO is built to handle. BEMO is not a DIY platform. It is a managed compliance service that assigns a dedicated team to your account and owns the outcome of getting you compliant.
Here is what that looks like in practice:
BEMO's managed compliance service starts at approximately $4,800 per month, which covers the full team, tooling, and ongoing maintenance for organizations with up to 500 employees.
BEMO assigns a dedicated multi-role team to your account and manages your compliance from GAP assessment through ongoing maintenance. You get a clear roadmap, a Microsoft-native security stack, and a team that owns the outcome.
Book a meeting with BEMO to get started with a NIST 800-171 GAP assessment.
NIST SP 800-171 requirements are 110 security controls organized into 14 control families that protect Controlled Unclassified Information in non-federal systems. They cover access control, incident response, configuration management, audit logging, and more. All 110 requirements apply to any organization that processes or stores CUI, with no optional subset.
NIST SP 800-171 includes exactly 110 requirements across 14 control families. This is the same set of controls that forms the basis of CMMC Level 2 certification, which requires a third-party assessment every three years. The 2024 Revision 3 update made some structural changes, so it is worth confirming which version applies to your specific contract requirements.
NIST SP 800-171 is the underlying security standard. CMMC is the certification program that the Department of Defense uses to verify that defense contractors actually meet those requirements. CMMC Level 2 maps directly to the 110 NIST 800-171 requirements and requires a third-party assessment rather than a self-attestation. If you are pursuing CMMC Level 2, you are effectively implementing NIST 800-171 compliance requirements as your foundation.
Most organizations take 8 to 18 months to reach a defensible compliance posture, depending on where they start. Organizations with an existing Microsoft environment and some security controls in place tend to move faster. Those starting with minimal documentation and no GRC tooling typically take longer. BEMO's typical initial implementation timeline is approximately 8 months.
A GAP assessment evaluates your current environment against all 110 NIST SP 800-171 requirements and identifies which controls are fully implemented, partially implemented, or missing entirely. It also identifies the documentation gaps in your SSP and POA&M. The output is a prioritized list of remediation actions that forms the basis of your implementation roadmap.
NIST 800-171 compliance requirements span IT, security, legal, and HR. Building an internal team with expertise across all of those areas takes months and costs $84,000 to $132,000 or more per qualified hire. A managed compliance partner brings a full team, proven tooling, and assessor relationships on day one. For most small and mid-size organizations, it is the faster and more cost-effective path to a defensible compliance posture.
Every BEMO client gets a dedicated team that includes a Customer Success Manager, Project Manager, Delivery Engineer, Security Engineer, SOC Analyst, IT Manager, Support Engineer, and virtual CISO. That team handles implementation, ongoing monitoring, policy management, and assessor coordination throughout your compliance program.