Free AZ-204 practice exams give you a fast way to gauge your readiness for the Microsoft Azure Developer Associate certification. Whether you are mid-career and adding cloud skills, or pivoting from on-premises development, working through realistic mock questions is the surest way to spot gaps before exam day.
What AZ-204 covers
The AZ-204 exam validates skills across five domains. You build and deploy Azure compute solutions with App Service, Azure Functions, and Container Apps. You develop for Azure storage including Blob storage and Cosmos DB. You implement security with Microsoft Entra ID, managed identities, Key Vault, and Microsoft Graph. You monitor and optimize using Application Insights, Azure Monitor, and Azure Cache for Redis. You connect services together with API Management, Event Grid, Event Hubs, and Service Bus. The exam is 120 minutes with 40 to 60 questions and a 700/1000 passing score.
What's in these practice exams
Our free Azure Developer Associate practice questions cover all five exam domains weighted to match the real exam:
- App Service deployment slots, Azure Functions triggers and bindings, Container Apps scaling
- Blob storage tiers, lifecycle policies, and SAS tokens
- Cosmos DB partition keys, consistency levels, and the change feed
- Microsoft Entra ID OAuth flows, managed identities, and Key Vault references
- Application Insights instrumentation, KQL queries, and distributed tracing
- API Management policies, Event Grid subscriptions, Service Bus sessions, and Event Hubs partitions
The first set is completely free with no signup. The remaining 24 sets unlock premium features like score tracking, weak-area analytics, and timed mode that simulates the real exam.
How to use these effectively
Start with the free set to identify weak domains. Read every explanation, not just the ones you missed, because the rationales call out the gotchas Microsoft loves to test. Once you have studied your weaker areas, work through a few more sets in timed mode to build pace. Mix question sets rather than burning through all 20 questions of one domain at a time. Aim to score 80% or higher across multiple sets before booking the real exam.