As organizations start preparing for CMMC Level 2, one term keeps surfacing in cloud conversations: FedRAMP.
That usually leads to confusion.
Do we need FedRAMP?
Is FedRAMP part of CMMC?
If our cloud provider is FedRAMP Moderate, are we compliant?
The short answer is simple:
FedRAMP and CMMC are different programs — but they are tightly connected.
What FedRAMP Actually Is (Plain English)
FedRAMP (Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program) is a U.S. government program that authorizes cloud service providers for use by federal agencies.
Key distinction:
If you’re not building or selling a cloud platform to the federal government, FedRAMP is not something you “get certified for.”
But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t matter to you.
Where FedRAMP Fits into the CMMC Ecosystem
CMMC focuses on how your organization protects Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI).
That includes:
If any of those happen in the cloud, then your cloud provider becomes part of your CMMC story.
This is where FedRAMP shows up.
FedRAMP as “Inherited Security”
When a cloud provider has FedRAMP Moderate authorization, it means their underlying infrastructure has been formally assessed against NIST-based security requirements.
From a CMMC perspective, this allows contractors to inherit certain security controls instead of implementing and proving everything themselves at the infrastructure level.
Important clarification:
Inherited controls reduce effort — they do not transfer responsibility.
You are still responsible for:
FedRAMP helps, but it doesn’t replace CMMC controls.
Why Assessors Ask About FedRAMP
During a CMMC assessment, assessors will want clear answers to questions like:
Using a FedRAMP Moderate–authorized cloud provider makes those answers easier to defend.
Using a non-authorized provider doesn’t automatically mean failure — but it usually means more scrutiny, more documentation, and more risk.
The Most Common Misunderstanding
Many SMBs assume:
“If our cloud provider is FedRAMP Moderate, we’re covered.”
In reality:
Think of FedRAMP as a solid foundation, not a finished building.
What This Means for SMBs
You don’t need to pursue FedRAMP.
But you do need to understand:
Strong CMMC readiness is less about buying tools and more about making defensible design decisions.
FedRAMP is one of those decisions — quietly shaping outcomes long before an assessor ever shows up.