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Networking · Career Guide

How to Become a Network Administrator

What it takes to manage and maintain an organization's networking needs — required education, daily tasks, certifications, and how to enter the field.

Last editorial review: May 2026

By CBT Nuggets Editorial · Last reviewed May 2026

Network administrators manage and maintain an organization's networking needs. They keep email, cloud apps, conferencing, and the underlying connectivity online, secure, and running at peak performance. It's the role most IT teams hire first to own the network layer.

On a 5- to 15-person IT team, the network administrator is usually the person whose pager fires first when the office Wi-Fi drops at 9am.
For IT Directors & training managers

What network administrators handle

The role is operational, not architectural. Network administrators install and configure LANs, WANs, and VPNs. They monitor performance and troubleshoot when things go sideways. They identify and fix bottlenecks, outages, or that one rogue switch causing chaos. They manage bandwidth and traffic prioritization so critical applications get the headroom they need.

  • Install and configure LANs, WANs, VPNs
  • Monitor performance and troubleshoot outages
  • Manage bandwidth and traffic prioritization
  • Plan disaster recovery and redundancy
  • Maintain network documentation
  • Secure the network — firewalls, access control, intrusion prevention

Technical skills the role demands

Skills vary by industry and stack, but the network admin floor is the same across employers: deep networking fundamentals (every layer of the OSI model, how data moves, how to configure routers, switches, access points); security expertise (firewalls, VPNs, anomaly detection, access controls); vendor-specific fluency (mostly Cisco and Juniper for enterprise gear); cloud networking (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud); and increasingly, scripting in Python, Bash, or PowerShell to automate repetitive operations.

Education and certifications

Most network administrators hold a bachelor's degree in IT, computer science, or networking. If college isn't the path, boot camps and structured online courses cover the same ground. Several industry certifications signal readiness regardless of degree status.

  • Cisco CCNA — the most common networking entry credential
  • CompTIA Network+ — vendor-neutral foundation
  • Microsoft Certified: Windows Server Fundamentals
  • Juniper JNCIA — for Juniper-heavy shops
  • AWS Certified Advanced Networking — for cloud-first environments

Career path

Most network admins start as help desk technicians or junior systems administrators, then move into a dedicated network admin role. From there, advancement leads to senior network admin, network engineer, or IT manager. Specialized paths run through network architecture, security, and cloud networking.

Network Administrator vs. System Administrator

Both roles maintain IT infrastructure, but network admins focus on routers, switches, and firewalls while system admins keep servers and operating systems running. Think of it as the choice between maintaining the highways (network) or the cars driving on them (systems).

Compensation

How much does a Network Administrator make?

Network Administrator salary ranges by experience tier. Source data as of 2026.
ExperienceAverage Salary
Entry-Level (0-2 years)$56,000 - $73,000
Mid-Level (3-5 years)$65,000 - $94,000
Senior-Level (5+ years)$85,000 - $101,000+

Salary figures reflect 2026 market data.

Hiring a Network Administrator in the U.S. starts around $56,000/yr and runs significantly higher for senior roles. Training one internally on a CBT Nuggets Team plan is $749/seat/year — virtual labs, practice exams, and Trainerbot AI included.

For hiring managers

If you're hiring Network Administrators

If you're hiring a network admin, the right candidate is someone who's lived through a real outage — not just one who's earned the CCNA. Hands-on troubleshooting against your actual vendor mix beats abstract certification depth. Promote internally from help desk or sysadmin when the candidate has shown they can keep their head during a P1.

Build the capability

Each link routes to training that maps to the skills on this career path.

Network Administrator FAQ

Close the team gap

Build a Network Administrator bench on your team

CBT Nuggets builds expert-led team training that closes the skill gaps these career paths describe. Talk to sales about a plan that fits your team.