For IndividualsFor Educators
ExpertMinds LogoExpertMinds
ExpertMinds

Ace your certifications with Practice Exams and AI assistance.

  • Browse Exams
  • For Educators
  • Blog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Support
  • AWS SAA Exam Prep
  • PMI PMP Exam Prep
  • CPA Exam Prep
  • GCP PCA Exam Prep

© 2026 TinyHive Labs. Company number 16262776.

    PracticeAzure Fundamentals (AZ-900)Azure Fundamentals AZ-900 Practice Exam 4Question 46
    Easy1 markMultiple Choice
    Domain 3.1: Cost Management in AzureCost ManagementTags

    AZ-900 · Question 46 · Domain 3.1: Cost Management in Azure

    True or False: You can use Azure Tags to group billing data so you can see how much a specific department (e.g., 'Marketing') is spending.

    Answer options:

    A.

    True

    B.

    False

    How to approach this question

    Evaluate the purpose of tagging resources in Azure.

    Full Answer

    A.True✓ Correct
    Tags are metadata elements (name/value pairs) that you apply to your Azure resources. A primary use case for tags is cost management; you can filter your Azure bill by tags to see exactly how much a specific department, project, or environment is costing.

    Common mistakes

    Thinking tags are only for technical organization and have no impact on billing views.
    Question 45All questionsQuestion 47

    Practice the full Azure Fundamentals AZ-900 Practice Exam 4

    60 questions · hints · full answers · grading

    Sign up freeTake the exam

    More questions from this exam

    Q01What is the primary definition of cloud computing?EasyQ02Under the shared responsibility model, which of the following is ALWAYS the responsibility of the...MediumQ03True or False: In a public cloud deployment model, you must purchase and manage your own physical...EasyQ04A company wants to move away from purchasing physical servers and instead pay monthly for the com...MediumQ05Which TWO of the following are primary benefits of using cloud computing? (Select TWO)Easy
    View all 60 questions →