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CMMC Level 2 Certification – North Carolina

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North Carolina Department of War (DoW) contractors and subcontractors are now required to comply with the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC 2.0) framework. It is designed to ensure those working in the Defense Industrial Base (DIB) have appropriate safeguards to protect controlled unclassified information (CUI). Those who handle, process, store, or transmit CUI are required to comply with 110 security requirements from NIST SP 800. In other words, these companies are required to meet CMMC Level 2 requirements, as defined in 32 CFR Part 170 and related DFARS, to continue doing business with the DoW. CMMC Level 2 Certification requirements are required to be added to applicable contracts starting November 10, 2026. To bid on those contracts, the DIB is required to attain a favorable CMMC Level 2 Certification status from a CMMC Third Party Assessor Organization (C3PAO). Only CP3AO certified assessors are permitted by the DoW to conduct the assessment and confirm compliance with established requirements.

CMMC Level 2 Certification – North Carolina

McKonly & Asbury is authorized as a CMMC C3PAO for level 2 certification assessments. We have worked with dozens of DoW contractors and subcontractors either with the certification assessment or with mock assessments. Our team has undergone significant training on the certification process and undergoes regular training on cybersecurity and data management. If your company needs a Level 2 certification, McKonly & Asbury stands ready to assist.

 

 

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CMMC Certification Solutions – North Carolina

By leveraging our tiered cybersecurity services, you can prepare your North Carolina organization to meet DoW and industry-related cybersecurity standards. Explore our suite of security audit and assessment solutions:

CMMC Frequently Asked Questions

CMMC Level 2 is intended for organizations that process, store and transmit Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) and requires implementation of all 110 security requirements from NIST SP 800-171. In contrast, Level 1 only includes 17 basic safeguarding requirements for Federal Contract Information (FCI).

Yes, most organizations seeking Level 2 certification must undergo a third-party assessment conducted by a CMMC Third-Party Assessment Organization (C3PAO). However, some contracts may only require a CMMC Level 2 self-assessment with affirmation. The Affirming Official shall submit a CMMC affirmation attesting to continuing compliance with all requirements of the CMMC Status Level 2 (Self).

The duration can vary depending on the scope of the environment, type of implementation, number of physical locations and amount physical controlled unclassified information (CUI). Typically, the assessment will cover a three-to-six-week time period. This includes the pre-assessment, assessing conformity of the security requirements and completing and reporting the assessment results. There is usually one week dedicated to interviews during the assessment of conformity.

Key steps include identifying the scope and boundaries, conducting a gap analysis against NIST SP 800-171, documenting a system security plan (SSP) performing a self-assessment. It is recommended that your chosen C3PAO is engaged to perform a Level 2 mock assessment several months prior to the Level 2 Certification assessment.

Once granted, CMMC Level 2 certification is valid for three years, with annual affirmations required to ensure continued compliance.

You’ll need comprehensive documentation, including a System Security Plan (SSP), network diagrams, asset inventories, controlled unclassified information (CUI) data flow diagram, self-assessment with Met/Not Met and explanation for all 320 security requirements, policies, procedures, and supporting evidence of implementation of the security requirements.

A CMMC Third-Party Assessment Organization (C3PAO) is an authorized assessor that assesses your organization’s CMMC Level 2 implementation and verifies whether you meet the CMMC Level 2 requirements before issuing a final or conditional CMMC Level 2 certification.

If your organization fails, you will receive a report of Met, Not Met, or N/A for all 320 security requirements. If a security requirement is Not Met, the report will include a clear explanation of why the security requirement was Not Met. You will be required to engage a C3PAO and go through the entire CMMC Level 2 Certification assessment process again. M&A recommends that you engage your selected C3PAO to perform a Mock Assessment of selected control objectives as part of preparation for the Level 2 Certification Assessment.

C3PAOs are forbidden from consulting on CMMC implementation and conducting the CMMC assessment for the same organization. A C3PAO can consult if they are not doing the assessment. A Registered Practitioner Organization (RPO) should be engaged to assist with CMMC implementation. We also recommend engaging your selected C3PAO to perform a Mock Assessment several months before the scheduled CMMC Level 2 Certification Assessment.

Contact our North Carolina CMMC Team

McKonly & Asbury provides CMMC Level 2 Certification to DoW contractors in North Carolina from our Pennsylvania office locations. Interested in learning more about our CMMC services? Complete the form below and a team member will follow up with you shortly.


North Carolina DoD Contractor Community

The Department of Defense contractor community in North Carolina is shaped by a strong military presence, a rapidly growing technology sector, and a long history of aerospace, logistics, and advanced manufacturing activity. Major installations such as Fort Liberty (formerly Fort Bragg), Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, and Seymour Johnson Air Force Base anchor the state’s defense economy, creating steady demand for engineering services, cybersecurity, aviation maintenance, simulation technology, and logistics support. Contractors in the Fayetteville, Jacksonville, Havelock, Goldsboro, and Wilmington corridors frequently support Army modernization, Marine Corps aviation readiness, and Air Force sustainment programs, while research partnerships tied to the Research Triangle region add a growing layer of software development, data analytics, and emerging defense technology work.

North Carolina’s defense ecosystem includes a mix of large prime contractors, mid-tier integrators, and specialized small businesses that focus on training systems, unmanned platforms, communications infrastructure, and cybersecurity compliance. Universities such as North Carolina State University, Duke University, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill contribute to talent pipelines and federally funded research, strengthening the state’s appeal for innovation-driven defense programs. Economic development groups and organizations like the North Carolina Military Business Center actively connect local companies to federal procurement opportunities, helping small and mid-sized firms enter the defense supply chain.