Should You Take PSM I or Directly Aim for PSM II?

Certification Path

PSM I or PSM II: Navigating the Scrum Certification Crossroads

Should you build the foundation or jump straight to the advanced level? We analyze the cost, difficulty, and career impact of each choice.

It’s the most common question I get from aspiring Scrum Masters: "Can I skip PSM I and go straight to PSM II?"

The short answer: Yes, you can. But should you? That depends on whether you want a shiny badge or a sustainable career. Let's break it down.

The Core Difference: PSM I proves you know the rules of Scrum. PSM II proves you can apply them when things go wrong in the real world.

1. The Tale of the Tape: Side-by-Side

Before making a decision, look at the hard data. The jump in difficulty is significant.

Feature PSM I (The Foundation) PSM II (The Expert)
Focus Scrum Guide Rules & Theory Complex Scenarios & Facilitation
Difficulty Hard (Pass: 85%) Very Hard (Pass: 85%)
Question Style Fact-based & Basic Scenarios Nuanced, "Grey Area" Scenarios
Cost $200 USD $250 USD
← Swipe to compare →

2. Why You Should Start with PSM I

For 90% of people, PSM I is the correct first step. It is the "White Belt" that ensures your stance is correct before you try to spar.

Build the Foundation

You cannot improvise jazz if you don't know the scales. PSM I forces you to unlearn "corporate habits" and learn pure Scrum.

Lower Risk

Failing PSM II costs $250. Failing PSM I costs $200. It is safer to validate your knowledge on the cheaper, more straightforward exam first.

Not Sure Where You Stand?

Take our free PSM I diagnostic test. If you score below 90%, you are definitely not ready for PSM II.

Take Free Test

3. When to Jump Straight to PSM II

There is a specific profile of person who can skip PSM I. If this is you, go for it:

A
The Battle-Hardened Veteran
You have been a Scrum Master for 3+ years. You have dealt with angry stakeholders, silent retrospectives, and zombie scrum.
B
The "Deep Reader"
You haven't just read the Scrum Guide; you've read books by Gunther Verheyen, Barry Overeem, and Geoff Watts. You understand the *spirit* of Scrum, not just the mechanics.
Warning: Experience can be a trap. Many veteran Scrum Masters fail PSM II because they answer based on "what my company does" rather than "what Professional Scrum is."

4. The Financial Strategy

Let's talk ROI. Is it worth paying for both?

  • Resume Screening: Recruiters look for "PSM I" as a keyword. PSM II is a differentiator, but PSM I gets you in the door.
  • Momentum: Passing PSM I gives you a confidence boost. Jumping into PSM II and failing can be demotivating.

Final Verdict

Start with PSM I. It creates a solid bedrock of theory. Once you pass, you can immediately start studying for PSM II with the confidence that your fundamentals are sound.

Don't rush to the finish line. The journey of understanding Scrum is where the real value lies.

Prepare for Both Exams

Our simulator includes difficulty levels ranging from "Basic" (PSM I) to "Advanced" (PSM II style).

Author: PrepForScrum Team • Updated: