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Risk-based access policies

Access control policies can be applied to protect organizations when a sign-in or user is detected to be at risk. Such policies are called risk-based policies.

Diagram that shows a conceptual risk-based Conditional Access policy.

Microsoft Entra Conditional Access offers two risk conditions powered by Microsoft Entra ID Protection signals: Sign-in risk and User risk. Organizations can create risk-based Conditional Access policies by configuring these two risk conditions and choosing an access control method. During each sign-in, ID Protection sends the detected risk levels to Conditional Access, and the risk-based policies apply if the policy conditions are satisfied.

You might require multifactor authentication when the sign-in risk level is medium or high, users are only prompted at that level.

Diagram that shows a conceptual risk-based Conditional Access policy with self-remediation.

The previous example also demonstrates a main benefit of a risk-based policy: automatic risk remediation. When a user successfully completes the required access control, like a secure password change, their risk is remediated. That sign-in session and user account aren't at risk, and no action is needed from the administrator.

Allowing users to self-remediate using this process significantly reduces the risk investigation and remediation burden on the administrators while protecting your organizations from security compromises. More information about risk remediation can be found in the article, Remediate risks and unblock users.

Sign-in risk-based Conditional Access policy

During each sign-in, ID Protection analyzes hundreds of signals in real-time and calculates a sign-in risk level that represents the probability that the given authentication request isn't authorized. This risk level then gets sent to Conditional Access, where the organization's configured policies are evaluated. Administrators can configure sign-in risk-based Conditional Access policies to enforce access controls based on sign-in risk, including requirements such as:

  • Block access
  • Allow access
  • Require multifactor authentication

If risks are detected on a sign-in, users can perform the required access control such as multifactor authentication to self-remediate and close the risky sign-in event to prevent unnecessary noise for administrators.

Screenshot of a sign-in risk-based Conditional Access policy.

Note

Users must have previously registered for Microsoft Entra multifactor authentication before triggering the sign-in risk policy.

User risk-based Conditional Access policy

ID Protection analyzes signals about user accounts and calculates a risk score based on the probability that the user is compromised. If a user has risky sign-in behavior, or their credentials leak, ID Protection uses these signals to calculate the user risk level. Administrators can configure user risk-based Conditional Access policies to enforce access controls based on user risk, including requirements such as:

  • Block access.
  • Allow access but require a secure password change.

A secure password change remediates the user risk and close the risky user event to prevent unnecessary noise for administrators.

Migrate ID Protection risk policies to Conditional Access

If you have the legacy user risk policy or sign-in risk policy enabled in ID Protection (formerly Identity Protection), you should migrate them to Conditional Access.

Warning

The legacy risk policies configured in Microsoft Entra ID Protection will be retired on October 1, 2026.

Configuring risk policies in Conditional Access provides benefits like the ability to:

  • Manage access policies in one location.
  • Use report-only mode and Graph APIs.
  • Enforce sign-in frequency to require reauthentication every time.
  • Provide granular access control combining risk with other conditions like location.
  • Enhance security with multiple risk-based policies targeting different user groups or risk levels.
  • Improve diagnostics experience detailing which risk-based policy applied in sign-in Logs.
  • Support the backup authentication system.

Microsoft Entra multifactor authentication registration policy

ID Protection can help organizations roll out Microsoft Entra multifactor authentication using a policy requiring registration at sign-in. Enabling this policy is a great way to ensure new users in your organization register for MFA on their first day. Multifactor authentication is one of the self-remediation methods for risk events within ID Protection. Self-remediation allows your users to take action on their own to reduce helpdesk call volume.

More information about Microsoft Entra multifactor authentication can be found in the article, How it works: Microsoft Entra multifactor authentication.