Question 426 of 1,040
Design Secure ArchitecturesmediumMultiple ChoiceObjective-mapped

SAA-C03 Design Secure Architectures Practice Question

This SAA-C03 practice question tests your understanding of design secure architectures. Match the stated requirement to the specific cloud service, access model, or configuration option — many options are valid in isolation but not for this scenario. After answering, compare your reasoning against the explanation and wrong-answer breakdown below. Once you have made your selection, read the full explanation to reinforce the concept and understand why each distractor is designed to mislead on exam day.

A media company has users around the world uploading 1 to 5 GB files directly to a single Amazon S3 bucket. Upload times are slow from distant regions, but the app must keep using S3 as the destination. What should the architects enable to improve upload performance?

Answer choices

Why each option matters

Answer the question above first, then reveal the full breakdown to understand why each option is right or wrong.

Correct answer & explanation

Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration on the bucket.

Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration (B) uses AWS edge locations to accelerate uploads over the public internet. When a user uploads a file, the data is sent to the nearest edge location via optimized network paths, then forwarded over AWS's private backbone to the S3 bucket. This reduces latency and improves throughput for large files (1–5 GB) from distant regions, directly addressing the slow upload times while keeping S3 as the destination.

Key principle: Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Answer analysis

Option-by-option breakdown

For each option: why learners choose it and why it is or isn't the right answer here.

  • Amazon CloudFront for origin caching of uploaded files.

    Why it's wrong here

    CloudFront is primarily used to cache and accelerate downloads and web content delivery. It is not the standard solution for speeding up direct uploads to S3 from distant users. While it can sit in front of origins, the better fit for improving upload performance to S3 is a feature that optimizes the upload path itself.

    When this WOULD be correct

    A company needs to reduce latency for global users downloading static content (e.g., images, videos) from an S3 bucket. Enabling CloudFront would cache content at edge locations, improving download speeds and reducing load on the origin.

  • Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration on the bucket.

    Why this is correct

    S3 Transfer Acceleration improves upload performance over long distances by routing traffic through AWS edge locations and optimized network paths to the target bucket. This is a strong fit for globally distributed users uploading large files directly to S3. It preserves the same storage destination while making the transfer path faster and more consistent for remote clients.

    Related concept

    Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

  • Provisioned IOPS EBS volumes attached to a transfer server.

    Why it's wrong here

    Provisioned IOPS EBS volumes help block storage performance on EC2 instances, but they do not directly solve a global S3 upload bottleneck. The requirement is about clients uploading to S3 from distant regions, not about local disk throughput on an intermediate server. This option changes the wrong part of the architecture.

    When this WOULD be correct

    A question where an application requires high-performance, low-latency storage for a database or transactional workload running on a single EC2 instance, and the storage must meet specific IOPS requirements.

  • Amazon EFS with a mount target in each Region.

    Why it's wrong here

    EFS is a shared file system, not an object storage destination for internet uploads. It does not replace S3 for this use case and would not solve the long-distance upload challenge. The workload needs faster delivery into S3 itself, which is why a transfer acceleration feature is more appropriate.

    When this WOULD be correct

    A company needs a shared file system accessible from multiple EC2 instances across different AWS regions for low-latency file access, with automatic scaling and high durability. Enabling EFS with mount targets in each region would be correct.

Option-by-option analysis

Why each answer is right or wrong

Understanding why wrong answers are wrong — and when they would be correct — is what separates a 750 score from a 900. The SAA-C03 exam frequently reuses these exact scenarios with slightly different constraints.

Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration on the bucket.Correct answer

Why this is correct

S3 Transfer Acceleration improves upload performance over long distances by routing traffic through AWS edge locations and optimized network paths to the target bucket. This is a strong fit for globally distributed users uploading large files directly to S3. It preserves the same storage destination while making the transfer path faster and more consistent for remote clients.

Amazon CloudFront for origin caching of uploaded files.Wrong answer — click to see why

Why this is wrong here

CloudFront is a content delivery network for caching and accelerating downloads, not uploads. It does not improve upload performance to an S3 bucket because uploads go directly to the origin, not through CloudFront.

★ When this WOULD be the correct answer

A company needs to reduce latency for global users downloading static content (e.g., images, videos) from an S3 bucket. Enabling CloudFront would cache content at edge locations, improving download speeds and reducing load on the origin.

Why candidates choose this

Candidates may assume CloudFront accelerates all data transfer (both upload and download) because it improves delivery speed, but it does not optimize the upload path to S3.

Provisioned IOPS EBS volumes attached to a transfer server.Wrong answer — click to see why

Why this is wrong here

Provisioned IOPS EBS volumes attached to a transfer server do not improve upload speeds to S3; they improve disk I/O for an intermediate server, but the bottleneck is network latency to S3, not local disk performance.

★ When this WOULD be the correct answer

A question where an application requires high-performance, low-latency storage for a database or transactional workload running on a single EC2 instance, and the storage must meet specific IOPS requirements.

Why candidates choose this

Candidates may think that faster local storage on a transfer server will speed up uploads, but the real issue is network distance to S3, not the server's disk speed.

Amazon EFS with a mount target in each Region.Wrong answer — click to see why

Why this is wrong here

Amazon EFS is a shared file system for EC2 instances, not a direct upload destination for users. The question requires users to upload directly to S3, and EFS cannot replace S3 as the upload target.

★ When this WOULD be the correct answer

A company needs a shared file system accessible from multiple EC2 instances across different AWS regions for low-latency file access, with automatic scaling and high durability. Enabling EFS with mount targets in each region would be correct.

Why candidates choose this

Candidates may think that having EFS mount targets in multiple regions would reduce latency for uploads, but they overlook that EFS is not a direct upload endpoint for users and does not replace S3 for object storage.

Analysis generated from the official SAA-C03blueprint and verified against question context. The “when correct” sections are what AI assistants cite when candidates ask “what’s the difference between these options?”

Common exam traps

Common exam trap: answer the scenario, not the keyword

The trap here is confusing CloudFront's edge caching for downloads with S3 Transfer Acceleration's edge-based upload optimization, leading candidates to select CloudFront (A) even though it does not improve upload performance to S3.

Detailed technical explanation

How to think about this question

S3 Transfer Acceleration works by routing uploads through AWS edge locations using the S3-accelerate endpoint (e.g., `bucketname.s3-accelerate.amazonaws.com`). It leverages TCP optimizations and the AWS global network backbone to bypass congested internet segments, often achieving 50–500% improvement for cross-region uploads. The feature is billed per GB transferred, so it is cost-effective for large files but not for small objects under 1 MB.

KKey Concepts to Remember

  • Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.
  • Find the constraint that changes the correct option.
  • Eliminate answers that are true in general but not in this case.

TExam Day Tips

  • Watch for words such as best, first, most likely and least administrative effort.
  • Review why wrong options are wrong, not only why the correct option is correct.

Key takeaway

Answer the scenario, not the keyword: identify the specific constraint before choosing the most familiar-sounding option.

Real-world example

How this comes up in practice

A media company stores terabytes of video archives that are accessed once a year for audit purposes. Moving these objects to a cold storage tier (Azure Archive, S3 Glacier, or Google Nearline) costs a fraction of hot storage. Questions like this test whether you understand storage tiers, access frequency tradeoffs, and retrieval latency requirements.

Quick reference

AWS S3 Storage Class Comparison

Storage ClassMin DurationRetrievalUse Case
S3 StandardNoneImmediateFrequently accessed data
S3 Standard-IA30 daysImmediateInfrequent access, rapid retrieval
S3 One Zone-IA30 daysImmediateNon-critical infrequent data
S3 Intelligent-TieringNoneImmediate–hoursUnknown or changing access patterns
S3 Glacier Instant90 daysMillisecondsArchive with instant retrieval
S3 Glacier Flexible90 daysMinutes–hoursArchive, flexible retrieval
S3 Glacier Deep Archive180 daysHoursLong-term compliance archive

What to study next

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FAQ

Questions learners often ask

What does this SAA-C03 question test?

Design Secure Architectures — This question tests Design Secure Architectures — Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer..

What is the correct answer to this question?

The correct answer is: Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration on the bucket. — Amazon S3 Transfer Acceleration (B) uses AWS edge locations to accelerate uploads over the public internet. When a user uploads a file, the data is sent to the nearest edge location via optimized network paths, then forwarded over AWS's private backbone to the S3 bucket. This reduces latency and improves throughput for large files (1–5 GB) from distant regions, directly addressing the slow upload times while keeping S3 as the destination.

What should I do if I get this SAA-C03 question wrong?

Identify which exam domain this question belongs to, review the core concept, then practise similar questions from the same domain.

What is the key concept behind this question?

Read the scenario before looking for a memorised answer.

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Last reviewed: Jun 11, 2026

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This SAA-C03 practice question is part of Courseiva's free Amazon Web Services certification practice question bank. Courseiva provides original exam-style practice questions with explanations, topic-based practice, mock exams, readiness tracking, and study analytics to help learners prepare for the SAA-C03 exam.