What Are STIGs?
Security Technical Implementation Guides (STIGs) are mandatory cybersecurity configuration standards developed by the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) for securing information systems within the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). They define how to harden operating systems, software, network devices, and other IT components to reduce vulnerabilities and ensure compliance with federal security requirements.
These guides are published and maintained on the official DoD Cyber Exchange, where they serve as the authoritative source of DoD security configuration requirements.
Purpose of STIGs
STIGs exist to:
- Harden systems by defining secure configuration settings (e.g., permissions, services, encryption).
- Reduce configuration‑based vulnerabilities that attackers exploit.
- Align systems with federal security frameworks, such as NIST SP 800‑53 and the Risk Management Framework (RMF).
- Support Authorization to Operate (ATO) decisions within DoD environments.
STIGs are mandated by DoD cybersecurity policy, meaning all DoD information systems must implement approved security configuration guidelines.
What Do STIGs Contain?
A STIG is specific to a product and version and includes all security requirements applicable to that technology, as defined by DoD baselines.
Each STIG typically includes:
- Configuration requirements
- Technical settings (e.g., registry edits, service configurations)
- Security controls mapped to NIST controls and CCIs
- Vulnerability severity categories (CAT I, CAT II, CAT III)
- Verification and remediation instructions
STIGs cover a wide range of technologies, including:
- Operating systems (Windows, Linux, UNIX)
- Applications and middleware (web servers, databases)
- Network devices (routers, switches, firewalls)
- Mobile devices (smartphones, tablets)
There are over 500 STIGs across all technology types.
Who Must Use STIGs?
STIG compliance is mandatory for:
- DoD agencies
- Defense contractors
- Vendors handling DoD data
- Organizations connected to DoDIN (DoD Information Networks)
Many federal agencies and private companies also adopt STIGs as benchmarks for secure configuration, even when not required.
Why STIGs Are Important
STIGs provide:
1. Enhanced Security
They reduce the attack surface and protect systems from unauthorized access and cyberattacks.
2. Standardization
They enforce consistent security settings across all systems and technologies.
3. Regulatory Compliance
They help meet requirements under DoD policies and federal security standards such as FISMA.
4. Risk Mitigation
Hardening configurations significantly reduces vulnerability exposure.
STIG Levels and Categories
STIG findings are categorized by severity:
- CAT I (Critical): Immediate risk; must be fixed urgently
- CAT II (Medium): Weakens security posture
- CAT III (Low): Enhances security but is not critical
(These categories are standard across DISA STIGs.)
STIGs in DevSecOps and Modern DoD Environments
In modern DoD DevSecOps pipelines, STIGs are applied continuously during development, testing, and deployment to ensure secure software delivery.
STIGs are embedded in the DoD Enterprise DevSecOps Reference Design and form part of secure-by-design software factories.
STIG Compliance Process
A typical compliance process includes:
- Identify applicable STIGs for the system
- Scan and assess current configurations
- Prioritize remediation based on severity and system impact
- Apply required settings
- Document compliance for audits and ATO
- Continuously monitor and update as new STIG releases appear
Tools that support this include:
- DISA STIG Viewer
- SCAP Compliance Checker
- Anchore Enterprise
Examples of STIG Use Cases
1. Securing a Web Server
Applying web server STIGs ensures strong permissions, disables unnecessary services, and hardens authentication settings.
2. Hardening Network Devices
STIGs guide secure configurations for routers, switches, and firewalls, improving access control and reducing vulnerabilities.
In Summary
STIGs are highly detailed, mandatory DoD cybersecurity configuration guidelines that:
- Define secure system configurations
- Reduce vulnerabilities and improve resilience
- Ensure compliance with federal and DoD policies
- Standardize cybersecurity across organizations
- Support secure software development and operations
Whether you're in government, defense contracting, or a private organization seeking strong security baselines, STIGs are a foundational tool for system hardening and risk reduction.