Skip to content

Vulnerability Detection and Response Standard

The FedRAMP Vulnerability Detection and Response Standard ensures FedRAMP Authorized cloud service offerings use automated systems to effectively and continuously identify, analyze, prioritize, mitigate, and remediate vulnerabilities and related exposures to threats; and that information related to these activities are effectively and continuously reported to federal agencies for the purposes of ongoing authorization.

The Vulnerability Detection and Response standard defines minimum security requirements that cloud service providers must meet to be FedRAMP Authorized while allowing them flexibility in how they implement and adopt the majority of FedRAMP's requirements and recommendations. This creates a marketplace where cloud service providers can compete based on their individual approach and prioritization of security and agencies can choose to adopt cloud services with less effective security programs for less sensitive use cases while prioritizing cloud services with high performing security programs when needed.

Over time, FedRAMP will automatically review the machine-readable authorization data shared by participating cloud service providers to begin scoring cloud service offerings based on how effectively they meet or exceed the requirements and recommendations in this and other FedRAMP 20x standards.

All existing FedRAMP requirements, including control statements, standards, and other guidelines that reference vulnerability scanning or formal Plans of Action and Milestones (POA&Ms) are superseded by this standard and MAY be ignored by providers of cloud service offerings that have met the requirements to adopt this standard with approval by FedRAMP.

Effective Date(s) & Overall Applicability
  • Release: 25.11A
  • Published: 2025-11-18
  • Designator: VDR
  • Description: Updates for the FedRAMP 20x Phase Two pilot, including minor clarifications and improvements based on pilot feedback.

  • FedRAMP 20x:
    • This release is effective 2025-11-18 for 20x.
    • These Key Security Indicators apply to all FedRAMP 20x authorizations.
    • Phase One Pilot participants have one year from authorization to fully address these Key Security Indicators but must demonstrate continuous quarterly progress.
    • Phase Two Pilot participants must address all of these Key Security Indicators prior to submission for authorization review.
  • FedRAMP Rev5:
    • This release is effective 2025-10-08 for Rev5 Closed Beta.
    • This release is fully optional for Rev5.
    • Cloud service offerings who intend to adopt this standard MUST enroll in the Rev5 VDR Beta(s) and obtain approval from FedRAMP prior to halting any currently required Rev5 Continuous Monitoring process.
    • Providers should participate in the FedRAMP Rev5 Community Working Group at https://fedramp.gov/community to follow this process and request participation in the Closed Beta.
Background & Authority
  • OMB Circular A-130, Managing Information as a Strategic Resource OMB Circular A-130 defines continuous monitoring as "maintaining ongoing awareness of information security, vulnerabilities, threats, and incidents to support agency risk management decisions."
  • 44 USC § 3609 (a)(7) The FedRAMP Authorization Act (44 USC § 3609 (a)(7)) directs the Administrator of the General Services Administration to "coordinate with the FedRAMP Board, the Director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and other entities identified by the Administrator, with the concurrence of the Director and the Secretary, to establish and regularly update a framework for continuous monitoring..."

Requirements & Recommendations

These requirements apply ALWAYS to ALL FedRAMP Authorized cloud services based on the current Effective Date(s) and Overall Applicability of this standard.

FRR-VDR-01 Vulnerability Detection

Providers MUST systematically, persistently, and promptly discover and identify vulnerabilities within their cloud service offering using appropriate techniques such as assessment, scanning, threat intelligence, vulnerability disclosure mechanisms, bug bounties, supply chain monitoring, and other relevant capabilities; this process is called vulnerability detection.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-02 Vulnerability Response

Providers MUST systematically, persistently, and promptly track, evaluate, monitor, mitigate, remediate, assess exploitation of, report, and otherwise manage all detected vulnerabilities within their cloud service offering; this process is called vulnerability response.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-03 Timeframe Requirements

Providers MUST follow the requirements and recommendations outlined in FRR-VDR-TF regarding timeframes for vulnerability detection and response.

Note: Providers are strongly encouraged to build programs that consistently exceed these thresholds. Performance will be measured by FedRAMP for comparison between providers and scoring within the FedRAMP Marketplace.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-04 Sampling Identical Resources

Providers MAY sample effectively identical information resources, especially machine-based information resources, when performing vulnerability detection UNLESS doing so would decrease the efficiency or effectiveness of vulnerability detection.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-05 Grouping Vulnerabilities

Providers SHOULD evaluate detected vulnerabilities, considering the context of the cloud service offering, to identify logical groupings of affected information resources that may improve the efficiency and effectiveness of vulnerability response by consolidating further activity; requirements and recommendations in this standard are then applied to these consolidated groupings of vulnerabilities instead of each individual detected instance.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-06 Evaluate False Positives

Providers SHOULD evaluate detected vulnerabilities, considering the context of the cloud service offering, to determine if they are false positive vulnerabilities.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-07 Evaluate Exploitability

Providers MUST evaluate detected vulnerabilities, considering the context of the cloud service offering, to determine if they are likely exploitable vulnerabilities.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-08 Evaluate Internet-Reachability

Providers MUST evaluate detected vulnerabilities, considering the context of the cloud service offering, to determine if they are internet-reachable vulnerabilities.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-09 Estimate Potential Adverse Impact

Providers MUST evaluate detected vulnerabilities, considering the context of the cloud service offering, to estimate the potential adverse impact of exploitation on government customers AND assign one of the following potential adverse impact ratings:

  • N1: Exploitation could be expected to have negligible adverse effects on one or more agencies that use the cloud service offering.

  • N2: Exploitation could be expected to have limited adverse effects on one or more agencies that use the cloud service offering.

  • N3: Exploitation could be expected to have a serious adverse effect on one agency that uses the cloud service offering.

  • N4: Exploitation could be expected to have a catastrophic adverse effect on one agency that uses the cloud service offering OR a serious adverse effect on more than one federal agency that uses the cloud service offering.

  • N5: Exploitation could be expected to have a catastrophic adverse effect on more than one agency that uses the cloud service offering.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-10 Evaluation Factors

Providers SHOULD consider at least the following factors when considering the context of the cloud service offering to evaluate detected vulnerabilities:

  1. Criticality: How important are the systems or information that might be impacted by the vulnerability?

  2. Reachability: How might a threat actor reach the vulnerability and how likely is that?

  3. Exploitability: How easy is it for a threat actor to exploit the vulnerability and how likely is that?

  4. Detectability: How easy is it for a threat actor to become aware of the vulnerability and how likely is that?

  5. Prevalence: How much of the cloud service offering is affected by the vulnerability?

  6. Privilege: How much privileged authority or access is granted or can be gained from exploiting the vulnerability?

  7. Proximate Vulnerabilities: How does this vulnerability interact with previously detected vulnerabilities, especially partially or fully mitigated vulnerabilities?

  8. Known Threats: How might already known threats leverage the vulnerability and how likely is that?

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-11 Documenting Reasons

Providers MUST document the reason and resulting implications for their customers when choosing not to meet FedRAMP recommendations in this standard; this documentation MUST be included in the authorization data for the cloud service offering.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Application

This section provides guidance on the application of this standard, including recommendations for implementing high quality vulnerability detection and response programs; providers who follow some or all of these will be better positioned to meet future FedRAMP authorization requirements.

FRR-VDR-AY-01 Partial Mitigation

If it is not possible to fully mitigate or remediate detected vulnerabilities, providers SHOULD instead partially mitigate vulnerabilities promptly, progressively, and persistently.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AY-02 Design For Resilience

Providers SHOULD make design and architecture decisions for their cloud service offering that mitigate the risk of vulnerabilities by default AND decrease the risk and complexity of vulnerability detection and response.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AY-03 Automate Detection

Providers SHOULD use automated services to improve and streamline vulnerability detection and response.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AY-04 Detection on Changes

Providers SHOULD automatically perform vulnerability detection on representative samples of new or significantly changed information resources.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AY-05 Maintain Security Postures

Providers SHOULD NOT weaken the security of information resources to facilitate vulnerability scanning or assessment activities.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AY-06 Avoid Known Exploited Vulnerabilities

Providers SHOULD NOT deploy or otherwise activate new machine-based information resources with Known Exploited Vulnerabilities.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Reporting

This section identifies FedRAMP-specific reporting requirements and recommendations for vulnerabilities.

FRR-VDR-RP-01 Monthly Reporting

Providers MUST report vulnerability detection and response activity to all necessary parties persistently, summarizing ALL activity since the previous report; these reports are authorization data and are subject to the FedRAMP Authorization Data Sharing (ADS) standard.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-RP-02 High-Level Overviews

Providers SHOULD include high-level overviews of ALL vulnerability detection and response activities conducted during this period for the cloud service offering; this includes vulnerability disclosure programs, bug bounty programs, penetration testing, assessments, etc.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-RP-03 No Irresponsible Disclosure

Providers MUST NOT irresponsibly disclose specific sensitive information about vulnerabilities that would likely lead to exploitation, but MUST disclose sufficient information for informed risk-based decision-making to all necessary parties.

Note: See FRR-VDR-EX for exceptions to this requirement.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-RP-04 Responsible Public Disclosure

Providers MAY responsibly disclose vulnerabilities publicly or with other parties if the provider determines doing so will NOT likely lead to exploitation.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-RP-05 Vulnerability Details

Providers MUST include the following information (if applicable) on detected vulnerabilities when reporting on vulnerability detection and response activity, UNLESS it is an accepted vulnerability:

  1. Provider's internally assigned tracking identifier

  2. Time and source of the detection

  3. Time of completed evaluation

  4. Is it an internet-reachable vulnerability or not?

  5. Is it a likely exploitable vulnerability or not?

  6. Historically and currently estimated potential adverse impact of exploitation

  7. Time and level of each completed and evaluated reduction in potential adverse impact

  8. Estimated time and target level of next reduction in potential adverse impact

  9. Is it currently or is it likely to become an overdue vulnerability or not? If so, explain.

  10. Any supplementary information the provider responsibly determines will help federal agencies assess or mitigate the risk to their federal customer data within the cloud service offering resulting from the vulnerability

  11. Final disposition of the vulnerability

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-RP-06 Accepted Vulnerability Info

Providers MUST include the following information on accepted vulnerabilities when reporting on vulnerability detection and response activity:

  1. Provider's internally assigned tracking identifier

  2. Time and source of the detection

  3. Time of completed evaluation

  4. Is it an internet-reachable vulnerability or not?

  5. Is it a likely exploitable vulnerability or not?

  6. Currently estimated potential adverse impact of exploitation

  7. Explanation of why this is an accepted vulnerability

  8. Any supplementary information the provider determines will responsibly help federal agencies assess or mitigate the risk to their federal customer data within the cloud service offering resulting from the accepted vulnerability

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Exceptions

These exceptions MAY override some or all of the FedRAMP requirements and recommendations in this standard.

FRR-VDR-EX-01 Additional Reporting Requirements

Providers MAY be required to share additional vulnerability information, alternative reports, or to report at an alternative frequency as a condition of a FedRAMP Corrective Action Plan or other agreements with federal agencies.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-EX-02 Additional Details

Providers MAY be required to provide additional information or details about vulnerabilities, including sensitive information that would likely lead to exploitation, as part of review, response or investigation by necessary parties.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-EX-03 Do Not Reject Requests

Providers MUST NOT use this standard to reject requests for additional information from necessary parties which also include law enforcement, Congress, and Inspectors General.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Timeframes - All

This section provides guidance on timeframes that apply to all impact levels of FedRAMP authorization for activities required or recommended in this standard; these timeframes are thresholds that secure providers should consistently strive to exceed by significant margins.

FRR-VDR-TF-01 Monthly Human-Readable

Providers MUST report vulnerability detection and response activity to all necessary parties in a consistent format that is human readable at least monthly.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-TF-02 Remediate KEVs

Providers SHOULD remediate Known Exploited Vulnerabilities according to the due dates in the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog (even if the vulnerability has been fully mitigated) as required by CISA Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01 or any successor guidance from CISA.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-TF-03 Mark Accepted Vulnerabilities

Providers MUST categorize any vulnerability that is not or will not be fully mitigated or remediated within 192 days of evaluation as an accepted vulnerability.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Timeframes - Low

This section provides guidance on timeframes that apply specifically to FedRAMP Low authorizations for activities required or recommended in this standard; these timeframes are thresholds that secure providers should consistently strive to exceed by significant margins.

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-01 Machine-Readable History

Providers SHOULD make all recent historical vulnerability detection and response activity available in a machine-readable format for automated retrieval by all necessary parties (e.g. using an API service or similar); this information SHOULD be updated persistently, at least once every month.

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-02 Weekly Sample Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on representative samples of similar machine-based information resources, at least once every week.

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-03 Monthly Drift Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are likely to drift, at least once every month.

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-04 Six-Month Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are NOT likely to drift, at least once every six months.

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-05 Evaluate Within 7 Days

Providers SHOULD evaluate ALL vulnerabilities as required by FRR-VDR-07, FRR-VDR-08, and FRR-VDR-09 within 7 days of detection.

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-06 Mitigate Per Timeframes

Providers SHOULD partially mitigate, fully mitigate, or remediate vulnerabilities to a lower potential adverse impact within the timeframes from evaluation shown below (in days), factoring for the current potential adverse impact, internet reachability, and likely exploitability:

Potential Adverse Impact LEV + IRV LEV + NIRV NLEV
N5 4 8 32
N4 8 32 64
N3 32 64 192
N2 96 160 192

Applies to: Low

FRR-VDR-TF-LO-07 Mitigate During Operations

Providers SHOULD mitigate or remediate remaining vulnerabilities during routine operations as determined necessary by the provider.

Applies to: Low


Timeframes - Moderate

This section provides guidance on timeframes that apply specifically to FedRAMP Moderate authorizations for activities required or recommended in this standard; these timeframes are thresholds that secure providers should consistently strive to exceed by significant margins.

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-01 14-Day History

Providers SHOULD make all recent historical vulnerability detection and response activity available in a machine-readable format for automated retrieval by all necessary parties (e.g. using an API service or similar); this information SHOULD be updated persistently, at least once every 14 days.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-02 3-Day Sampling

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on representative samples of similar machine-based information resources, at least once every 3 days.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-03 14-Day Drift Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are likely to drift, at least once every 14 days.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-04 Monthly Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are NOT likely to drift, at least once per month.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-05 Evaluate Within 5 Days

Providers SHOULD evaluate ALL vulnerabilities as required by FRR-VDR-07, FRR-VDR-08, and FRR-VDR-09 within 5 days of detection.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-06 Incidents

Providers SHOULD treat internet-reachable likely exploitable vulnerabilities with a potential adverse impact of N4 or N5 as a security incident until they are partially mitigated to N3 or below.

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-07 Mitigate Per Timeframes

Providers SHOULD partially mitigate, fully mitigate, or remediate vulnerabilities to a lower potential adverse impact within the timeframes from evaluation shown below, factoring for the current potential adverse impact, internet reachability, and likely exploitability:

Potential Adverse Impact LEV + IRV LEV + NIRV NLEV
N5 2 4 16
N4 4 8 64
N3 16 32 128
N2 48 128 192

Applies to: Moderate

FRR-VDR-TF-MO-08 Mitigate During Operations

Providers SHOULD mitigate or remediate remaining vulnerabilities during routine operations as determined necessary by the provider.

Applies to: Moderate


Timeframes - High

This section provides guidance on timeframes that apply specifically to FedRAMP High authorizations for activities required or recommended in this standard; these timeframes are thresholds that secure providers should consistently strive to exceed by significant margins.

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-01 7-Day History

Providers SHOULD make all recent historical vulnerability detection and response activity available in a machine-readable format for automated retrieval by all necessary parties (e.g. using an API service or similar); this information SHOULD be updated persistently, at least once every 7 days.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-02 Daily Sampling

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on representative samples of similar machine-based information resources, at least once per day.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-03 7-Day Drift Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are likely to drift, at least once every 7 days.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-04 Monthly Detection

Providers SHOULD persistently perform vulnerability detection on all information resources that are NOT likely to drift, at least once every month.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-05 Evaluate Within 2 Days

Providers SHOULD evaluate ALL vulnerabilities as required by FRR-VDR-07, FRR-VDR-08, and FRR-VDR-09 within 2 days of detection.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-06 Treat N4/N5 As Incident

Providers SHOULD treat internet-reachable likely exploitable vulnerabilities with a potential adverse impact of N4 or N5 as a security incident until they are partially mitigated to N3 or below.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-07 Treat N5 Non-Internet as Incident

Providers SHOULD treat likely exploitable vulnerabilities that are NOT internet-reachable with a potential adverse impact of N5 as a security incident until they are partially mitigated to N4 or below.

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-08 Partial Mitigation Timeframes

Providers SHOULD partially mitigate vulnerabilities to a lower potential adverse impact within the maximum time-frames from evaluation shown below, factoring for the current potential adverse impact, internet reachability, and likely exploitability:

Potential Adverse Impact LEV + IRV LEV + NIRV NLEV
N5 .5 1 8
N4 2 8 32
N3 8 16 64
N2 24 96 192

Applies to: High

FRR-VDR-TF-HI-09 Mitigate During Operations

Providers SHOULD mitigate or remediate remaining vulnerabilities during routine operations as determined necessary by the provider.

Applies to: High


Agency Guidance

The section provides guidance for agencies that apply under 44 USC § 3613 (e) which states that the assessment and materials within a FedRAMP authorization package “shall be presumed adequate for use in an agency authorization to operate cloud computing products and services.”

FRR-VDR-AG-01 Review Vulnerability Reports

Agencies SHOULD review the information provided in vulnerability reports at appropriate and reasonable intervals commensurate with the expectations and risk posture indicated by their Authorization to Operate, and SHOULD use automated processing and filtering of machine readable information from cloud service providers.

Note: FedRAMP recommends that agencies only review overdue and accepted vulnerabilities with a potential adverse impact of N3 or higher unless the cloud service provider recommends mitigations or the service is included in a higher risk federal information system. Furthermore, accepted vulnerabilities generally only need to be reviewed when they are added or during an updated risk assessment due to changes in the agency’s use or authorization.

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AG-02 Maintain Agency POA&M

Agencies SHOULD use vulnerability information reported by the Provider to maintain Plans of Action & Milestones for agency security programs when relevant according to agency security policies (such as if the agency takes action to mitigate the risk of exploitation or authorized the continued use of a cloud service with accepted vulnerabilities that put agency information systems at risk).

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AG-03 Do Not Request Extra Info

Agencies SHOULD NOT request additional information from cloud service providers that is not required by this FedRAMP standard UNLESS the head of the agency or an authorized delegate makes a determination that there is a demonstrable need for such.

Note: This is related to the Presumption of Adequacy directed by 44 USC § 3613 (e).

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High

FRR-VDR-AG-04 Notify FedRAMP

Agencies MUST inform FedRAMP after requesting any additional vulnerability information or materials from a cloud service provider beyond those required by this policy by sending a notification to info@fedramp.gov.

Note: This is an OMB policy; agencies are required to notify FedRAMP in OMB Memorandum M-24-15 section IV (a).

Applies to: Low, Moderate, High


Technical assistance

FRA-VDR

Purpose: This Technical Assistance provides additional context behind the intent and goals of certain aspects of this standard that have caused significant confusion or requests for clarification during public comment. This assistance is initially designed for 20x Phase Two/Three and the Rev5 Closed Beta Balance Improvement Test.

Disclaimer: Every cloud service provider is different, every architecture is different, and every environment is different. Best practices and technical assistance MUST NOT be used as a checklist. All examples are for discussion purposes ONLY.


FRA-VDR-01

FedRAMP focuses on internet-reachable (rather than internet-accessible) to ensure that any service that might receive a payload from the internet is prioritized if that service has a vulnerability that can be triggered by processing the data in the payload. The simplest way to prevent exploitation of internet-reachable vulnerabilities is to intercept, inspect, filter, sanitize, reject, or otherwise deflect triggering payloads before they are processed by the vulnerable resource; once this prevention is in place the vulnerability should no longer be considered an internet-reachable vulnerability.

A classic example of an internet-reachable vulnerability on systems that are not typically internet-accessible is SQL injection (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL_injection), where an application stack behind a load balancer and firewall with no ability to route traffic to or from the internet can receive a payload indirectly from the internet that triggers the manipulation or compromise of data in a database that can only be accessed by an authorized connection from the application server on a private network.

Another simple example is the infamous Log4Shell (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log4Shell) vulnerability from 2021, where exploitation was possible via vulnerable internet-reachable resources deep in the application stack that were often not internet-accessible themselves.


FRA-VDR-02

The simple reality is that most traditional vulnerabilities discovered by scanners or during assessment are not likely to be exploitable; exploitation typically requires an unrealistic set of circumstances that will not occur during normal operation. The likelihood of exploitation will vary depending on so many factors that FedRAMP will not recommend a specific framework for approaching this beyond the recommendations and requirements in this document.

The proof, ultimately, is in the pudding - providers who regularly evaluate vulnerabilities as not likely exploitable without careful consideration are more likely to suffer from an adverse impact where the root cause was an exploited vulnerability that was improperly evaluated. If done recklessly or deliberately, such actions will have a potential adverse impact on a provider's FedRAMP authorization.