Are IT Certifications Still Worth It in 2026?
Every year, the same question comes up: are IT certifications still worth the investment? In 2026, the answer is a clear yes — but with some important nuances.
Let's look at the data.
The Numbers Don't Lie
According to the 2025 Global Knowledge IT Skills and Salary Report (the most recent large-scale survey), certified IT professionals earn an average of 15-20% more than their non-certified peers in comparable roles.
Here's what the salary premiums look like in Canada for popular certifications:
| Certification | Avg. Salary (Canada) | Premium vs Non-Certified | |---|---|---| | CCNA | $65,000 - $85,000 | +18% | | CCNP Enterprise | $85,000 - $115,000 | +22% | | AWS Solutions Architect | $90,000 - $130,000 | +25% | | CompTIA Security+ | $60,000 - $80,000 | +15% | | CISSP | $110,000 - $150,000 | +28% | | PMP | $85,000 - $120,000 | +20% |
These are averages — your actual salary depends on location, experience, and employer. Toronto and Vancouver command higher salaries than smaller markets. But the certification premium is consistent across regions.
Why Certifications Matter More in 2026
Three trends are making certifications more valuable, not less:
1. AI Is Raising the Bar
With AI tools handling routine tasks like basic troubleshooting and configuration generation, employers need people who understand the *why* behind the technology. Certifications prove you have that deeper understanding. A CCNA-certified engineer who understands why OSPF chooses one path over another is more valuable than someone who can only follow a runbook.
2. Immigration and Global Competition
Canada's tech workforce is increasingly global. When hiring managers evaluate candidates from different countries and education systems, certifications provide a universal benchmark. A CCNA means the same thing whether you earned it in Toronto, Lagos, or Mumbai.
3. Cloud and Security Demand Is Accelerating
The shift to cloud and the rise in cybersecurity threats have created massive talent gaps. AWS, Microsoft, and Google are all investing heavily in their certification programs because they need more qualified professionals deploying and managing their platforms. Security certifications like Security+ and CISSP are increasingly required — not optional — for security roles.
The ROI Calculation
Let's do the math for a CCNA certification at CISNET:
Investment:
Course fee: $1,499 CAD
Exam fee: $330 USD (~$450 CAD)
Study materials: $0 (included with CISNET course)
Time: 40 hours of class + ~80 hours of self-study
Total: ~$1,950 CAD
Return:
Average salary increase: $10,000-$15,000/year
Payback period: 2-3 months
3-year ROI: $28,000-$43,000
Even if we're conservative and assume only a $5,000 annual increase, the certification pays for itself in under 5 months. And unlike a university degree that takes 4 years and costs $40,000-$80,000, you can earn a CCNA in 3 months while working full-time.
When Certifications Are NOT Worth It
Certifications aren't a magic bullet. They're not worth it if:
- You're collecting certifications without applying the knowledge. Five certifications and no hands-on experience is a red flag to employers, not a green one.
- You're certifying in outdated technology. Some older certifications have diminishing value. Focus on current, in-demand certs.
- You're using certifications to avoid job searching. At some point, you need to stop studying and start working. Two or three targeted certifications plus real experience beats a wall of cert logos.
The Best Certification Path for 2026
Based on current job market demand in Canada, here's what we recommend:
For career starters (no IT experience):
CompTIA A+ → CompTIA Security+ → CCNA
For networking professionals:
CCNA → CCNP ENCOR → CCNP Concentration (ENARSI, SD-WAN, or Wireless)
For cloud careers:
AWS Solutions Architect Associate → AWS SysOps Administrator → AWS Solutions Architect Professional
For cybersecurity careers:
CompTIA Security+ → CISSP (after 5 years experience) or CySA+
For project managers:
PMP (if you have 3+ years of project experience)
The Bottom Line
IT certifications in 2026 offer one of the highest ROIs of any professional development investment. The key is choosing certifications that align with your career goals, studying with a method that emphasizes hands-on practice, and applying what you learn in real-world environments.
The question isn't whether certifications are worth it. The question is which ones are right for *you*.