Realistic Fastest Timeline
With the right preparation and tooling, a SOC 2 Type I report can be completed in as little as 4 to 6 weeks. Type II requires a minimum observation window (typically 3 months), so the fastest possible Type II is roughly 4 months from day one.
| Phase | Duration | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Platform setup and gap analysis | Week 1 | Onboard automation tool, identify gaps |
| Policy creation and control implementation | Weeks 2 – 3 | Generate policies, configure controls, train staff |
| Auditor fieldwork (Type I) | Weeks 3 – 4 | Auditor reviews evidence, issues report |
| Observation window (Type II only) | Months 2 – 4 | Continuous evidence collection |
The Sprint Approach: Parallelize Everything
The fastest teams treat SOC 2 readiness like a product sprint. Here is what to run in parallel:
- Day 1: Sign up for an automation platform and book your auditor. Auditor calendars fill up — do not wait.
- Week 1: While the platform scans your infrastructure, assign policy owners and start security awareness training.
- Week 2: Remediate gaps flagged by the platform. Push access-review, MFA, and encryption changes simultaneously — do not sequence them.
- Week 3: Invite the auditor to your platform's auditor portal so evidence is already organized when fieldwork begins.
Our Recommendation
LowerPlane's AI-powered platform can get you audit-ready in as little as 4 weeks by automating evidence collection, pre-mapping controls to SOC 2 trust service criteria, and generating policies from templates tailored to your stack. The built-in auditor portal means zero back-and-forth on evidence requests.
Automation Shortcuts That Save Weeks
- Cloud integration auto-evidence. Connect AWS, Azure, or GCP and let the platform pull configuration snapshots automatically instead of taking manual screenshots.
- HR system sync. Pulling onboarding/offboarding logs from your HRIS eliminates days of manual spreadsheet work.
- Pre-built policy library. Generating compliant policies from templates saves 2 – 3 weeks versus writing from scratch.
- Continuous monitoring. Set up alerts so control failures are caught immediately, not during the audit.
Common Bottlenecks and How to Avoid Them
- Auditor availability. Book your auditor before you start readiness, not after. Lead times can be 4 – 8 weeks.
- Vendor risk assessments. Start collecting vendor questionnaires on day one — waiting for third-party responses is the number-one calendar killer.
- Access reviews. Implement a quarterly access-review process now, even if it is manual. Auditors want to see it in place.
- Change management. If you lack a documented change-management process, adopt one immediately. It touches every trust service category.
Get Started
Start your fast-track with LowerPlane → and be audit-ready in weeks, not months.