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100+ Free TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Practice Questions

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What is an enterprise in TOGAF Business Architecture context?

A
B
C
D
to track
2026 Statistics

Key Facts: TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Exam

40

Exam Questions

The Open Group

60%

Passing Score (24/40)

The Open Group

60 min

Exam Duration

The Open Group

$375

Exam Fee

The Open Group 2026 retail schedule

Lifetime

Validity

The Open Group

10th Ed.

Body of Knowledge

TOGAF Standard 10th Edition

The TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation exam (OGBA-101) has 40 multiple-choice questions in 60 minutes, with a 60% (24/40) passing score. The body of knowledge is the TOGAF Standard, 10th Edition (and aligned Series Guides), focused on Business Architecture: capability mapping, value streams, organizational mapping, information mapping, customer journeys, business models, and the Business Architect's role within the ADM. The credential is distinct from TOGAF Enterprise Architecture Foundation (OGEA-101) — it is aimed specifically at Business Architecture practitioners, not generalist enterprise architects. Lifetime validity with no recertification. The exam is delivered at Pearson VUE test centers and via OnVUE remote proctoring; fee is $375 USD per The Open Group's 2026 retail schedule.

Sample TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Practice Questions

Try these sample questions to test your TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.

1What is an enterprise in TOGAF Business Architecture context?
A.Only a for-profit corporation
B.A collection of organizations that has a common set of goals — can be a corporation, government agency, or any entity with a common mission
C.A single department within a company
D.Only the IT function of an organization
Explanation: TOGAF defines an enterprise as any collection of organizations with a common set of goals. This includes for-profit corporations, government agencies, non-profits, and even partnerships. The scope can span an entire organization or a subset — what matters is the shared mission and goals being addressed by the architecture.
2Which best defines Enterprise Architecture?
A.Only IT infrastructure design
B.A discipline that proactively and holistically leads enterprise responses to disruptive forces by identifying and analyzing the execution of change toward desired business vision and outcomes
C.Only software architecture
D.A synonym for project management
Explanation: Enterprise Architecture is a holistic discipline that addresses the entire enterprise — business, data, application, and technology — to deliver value through coordinated change. It is not limited to IT or software, and it is distinct from project management (EA is strategic; PM is tactical execution).
3Which is the primary focus of a Business Architect?
A.Server configuration
B.Bridging strategy and execution by designing and articulating the structure of the business — capabilities, value streams, organization, information, and business models — to enable transformation
C.Database tuning
D.Network routing
Explanation: Business Architects translate business strategy into actionable structure — they design business capabilities, value streams, organization mappings, information concepts, and business models. They are the bridge between strategy and execution, distinct from technical architects (who handle Data, Application, and Technology).
4What are the four architecture domains in the TOGAF Standard?
A.Hardware, Software, Network, Storage
B.Business, Data, Application, Technology
C.Strategy, Operations, Sales, Finance
D.People, Process, Technology, Vendor
Explanation: TOGAF defines four architecture domains: Business (organization, processes, capabilities, value streams), Data (data entities and management), Application (application services and components), and Technology (infrastructure platforms, hardware, networks). Business Architecture is the foundation that the other three support.
5Which describes a Business Capability?
A.A specific software application
B.A particular ability or capacity that a business possesses or exchanges to achieve a specific purpose — describes WHAT the business does, not HOW
C.A network protocol
D.A database schema
Explanation: A business capability describes what a business does (e.g., 'Customer Onboarding', 'Inventory Management', 'Risk Scoring'). It is implementation-independent — focused on the WHAT, not the HOW. Capabilities are stable over time, even when processes, technology, and organization change.
6What is a Value Stream?
A.A revenue forecast
B.An end-to-end set of activities that deliver value to a stakeholder — typically modeled as sequential value-adding stages
C.A network of vendors
D.A list of project milestones
Explanation: A value stream is an end-to-end sequence of value-adding stages that produces value for an external (or sometimes internal) stakeholder. Stages might include 'Acquire Customer' → 'Onboard Customer' → 'Serve Customer'. Each stage delivers an interim value item; the entire stream delivers the value proposition.
7What is the primary difference between a Business Capability and a Business Process?
A.Capabilities and processes are the same thing
B.Capabilities describe WHAT the business does (stable, business language); processes describe HOW it does it (sequenced activities, change with org and tooling)
C.Capabilities are technical; processes are business
D.Capabilities are temporary; processes are permanent
Explanation: Capabilities describe what (stable abilities like 'Underwriting'); processes describe how (sequenced activities like 'Validate Application → Score Risk → Approve'). Processes change frequently with org changes and tooling; capabilities remain stable. Both are valuable but serve different purposes.
8Which is true about Business Capability mapping?
A.Capabilities are always sequenced like processes
B.Capability maps are typically hierarchical (Level 1 / Level 2 / Level 3), unsequenced, and use noun phrases — e.g., 'Customer Management' decomposed into 'Customer Onboarding' and 'Customer Servicing'
C.Capability maps must be flat
D.Capability maps include only IT capabilities
Explanation: Capability maps are hierarchical decompositions using noun phrases (e.g., 'Risk Management' → 'Credit Risk' → 'Credit Scoring'). Typically 2-4 levels deep. They are not sequenced (unlike processes or value streams). They cover all business capabilities, not just IT.
9What is the core ADM concept that runs through all TOGAF phases?
A.Project management
B.Requirements Management
C.Risk register
D.Communications Plan
Explanation: Requirements Management is the central process at the heart of the ADM diagram. It runs continuously through all phases (Preliminary, A through H), capturing, validating, prioritizing, and routing requirements as they emerge. Each phase generates new or changed requirements that feed back into the cycle.
10Which ADM phase establishes the EA Capability?
A.Phase A — Architecture Vision
B.Preliminary Phase
C.Phase B — Business Architecture
D.Phase H — Architecture Change Management
Explanation: The Preliminary Phase establishes the EA Capability before any specific architecture engagement begins. It sets up principles, governance framework, the tailored ADM, the Architecture Repository structure, and the EA team. It is run once when EA is first adopted, then revisited only when the capability itself changes.

About the TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Exam

The TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation certification validates understanding of business architecture concepts and the techniques the Business Architect uses to bridge strategy and execution within the TOGAF framework. Based on the TOGAF Standard, 10th Edition, OGBA-101 covers business capability mapping, value streams, organization mapping, information mapping, customer journeys, business models, the Business Motivation Model, capability-based planning, and the Business Architect's role in the ADM.

Assessment

40 multiple-choice questions, distributed across 9 syllabus topic areas including Introduction & Concepts, ADM, Business Architecture concepts (capabilities, value streams, organization, information), business modeling, scenarios, and the role of the Business Architect.

Time Limit

60 minutes

Passing Score

60% (24/40)

Exam Fee

$375 USD (The Open Group / Pearson VUE)

TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Exam Content Outline

15%

Introduction and Concepts

What enterprise, Enterprise Architecture, and Business Architecture mean; the role of the Business Architect; the four architecture domains (Business, Data, Application, Technology); how Business Architecture relates to strategy and operating model; relationship between TOGAF and ArchiMate.

15%

Introduction to the TOGAF ADM

The ADM as a framework — phases (Preliminary, A through H), Requirements Management at the centre, iteration, and tailoring. Phase A Architecture Vision; Phase B Business Architecture; Phase E Opportunities and Solutions; Phase F Migration Planning; Phase G Implementation Governance; Phase H Change Management.

20%

Business Capabilities

Defining business capabilities (the WHAT); capability-vs-process distinction; hierarchical capability mapping (Level 1, 2, 3); capability heat-mapping for investment decisions; mapping capabilities to organization units (responsibility) and value streams (where each capability is required).

15%

Value Streams and Customer Journeys

Value streams as sequenced value-adding stages from a stakeholder perspective; customer journey as the customer-side counterpart; mapping capabilities to value-stream stages; using these for gap analysis and investment prioritization.

10%

Organization Mapping and Information Mapping

Documenting organization unit structure and relationships; mapping units to capabilities and value streams to clarify accountability; conceptual information mapping (business-level data concepts and their relationships) — distinct from detailed Phase C Data Architecture.

10%

Business Models and Motivation

Business Model Canvas concepts (value proposition, customer segments, channels, revenue, costs, partnerships); Business Motivation Model (ends, means, influencers, assessments); business architecture content during Phase A Vision and Phase B.

10%

Architecture Governance and Principles

Architecture Principles template (Name, Statement, Rationale, Implications); Architecture Board role; compliance reviews; Statement of Architecture Work; Architecture Contract (signed in Phase G); dispensation mechanism.

5%

Architecture Repository (Foundation Level)

Six logical sections at a foundation level: Architecture Metamodel, Capability, Landscape (in-flight + deployed), Standards Information Base, Reference Library, Governance Log.

How to Pass the TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Exam

What You Need to Know

  • Passing score: 60% (24/40)
  • Assessment: 40 multiple-choice questions, distributed across 9 syllabus topic areas including Introduction & Concepts, ADM, Business Architecture concepts (capabilities, value streams, organization, information), business modeling, scenarios, and the role of the Business Architect.
  • Time limit: 60 minutes
  • Exam fee: $375 USD

Keys to Passing

  • Complete 500+ practice questions
  • Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
  • Focus on highest-weighted sections
  • Use our AI tutor for tough concepts

TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation Study Tips from Top Performers

1Master the capability-vs-process distinction — capabilities describe WHAT (stable abilities, business language); processes describe HOW (sequenced activities, change with reorgs and tooling). This distinction underpins many OGBA-101 questions.
2Learn the value stream + capability mapping technique cold. Value streams are sequenced stakeholder-perspective stages; capabilities are stable abilities mapped to those stages. This pairing is THE central Business Architecture practice today.
3Memorize the four-section principle template (Name, Statement, Rationale, Implications) and recognize each section in context. A common question pattern is showing a snippet and asking which section it occupies.
4Know the Statement of Architecture Work (Phase A, signed by Sponsor — engagement contract) vs Architecture Contract (Phase G, signed by delivery — implementation contract) distinction. They are easily confused.
5Study customer journeys vs value streams: same flow, different perspective. Customer journey = customer's experience across touchpoints; value stream = enterprise's stages that deliver value. Capabilities map to both.
6Understand the four-domain BDAT structure and that Business Architecture is the foundational domain — Data, Application, and Technology architectures support it. The order Business → Data/Application → Technology matters in the ADM.
7Practice the artifact taxonomy: catalogs (inventories), matrices (relationships between two entity types like Application/Function), diagrams (visual representations like Process Flow). Foundation-level questions ask which type a given artifact is.
8Learn the Architecture Repository's six logical sections at a foundation level: Metamodel, Capability, Landscape (in-flight + deployed), Standards Information Base, Reference Library, Governance Log. Know what each contains.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation certification?

OGBA-101 is The Open Group's foundation-level certification for Business Architecture practitioners. It validates understanding of business architecture concepts (capabilities, value streams, organization, information, customer journeys, business models) and the role of the Business Architect within the TOGAF ADM. It is distinct from TOGAF Enterprise Architecture Foundation (OGEA-101) — same Foundation level but a different body of knowledge focused on the Business domain.

How is OGBA-101 different from OGEA-101?

OGEA-101 (TOGAF Enterprise Architecture Foundation) is broad — covering all four architecture domains and the full ADM at a foundation level. OGBA-101 (TOGAF Business Architecture Foundation) goes DEEPER on the Business domain — capability mapping, value streams, organization, information, customer journeys, business models, BMM — while still anchoring in the ADM. They are complementary credentials; many practitioners hold both.

How is the OGBA-101 exam structured?

40 multiple-choice questions in 60 minutes; passing score is 60% (24 correct). Closed-book. Distributed across 9 syllabus topic areas: Introduction and Concepts (~6 questions), Introduction to the ADM, Business Architecture concepts, capabilities, value streams, organization mapping, information mapping, business models and motivation, and architecture governance. Delivered at Pearson VUE test centers or remotely via OnVUE.

How much does OGBA-101 cost?

Per The Open Group's exam fee schedule effective from February 2026, OGBA-101 costs USD $375 (retail voucher) or USD $400 (Pearson booking fee). Accredited training providers may bundle exam vouchers with their courses at a discount. There is no application fee — just the exam fee.

How hard is the OGBA-101 exam?

OGBA-101 is foundation-level — well-prepared candidates pass on the first attempt at a high rate (industry estimates ~75-80%). The challenge is in business architecture terminology and concept distinctions: capability vs process, value stream vs customer journey, ABB vs SBB, view vs viewpoint, dispensation expiry. Plan for 30-50 hours of study, with at least one full read of the relevant TOGAF 10 Series Guides plus 100+ practice questions.

What study materials are recommended?

The TOGAF Standard, 10th Edition (free download from opengroup.org), specifically the Business Architecture Series Guides. Supplement with the Business Architecture Body of Knowledge (BIZBOK from the Business Architecture Guild) for deeper technique guidance — concepts align closely with TOGAF. Practice with 100+ scenario and concept questions and aim for 85%+ on practice tests before scheduling the exam.

Is OGBA-101 valid for life?

Yes — TOGAF certifications carry lifetime validity, including OGBA-101. There is no recertification or continuing education requirement. If the TOGAF Standard is updated (e.g., a future 11th Edition), The Open Group typically offers a bridging exam so existing credential holders can update without retaking the full exam.

Should I take OGBA-101 or OGEA-101 first?

Depends on your role. If you are a Business Architecture practitioner — bridging strategy and execution, designing capability maps and value streams — OGBA-101 is more directly relevant. If you are a generalist Enterprise Architect or aim for the Practitioner-level OGEA-103 next, OGEA-101 is the natural foundation. Many practitioners take both eventually for breadth + depth.