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Zero Trust is a security strategy comprising three principles: "Verify explicitly", "Use least privilege access", and "Assume breach". Data protection, including key management, supports the "use least privilege access" principle. For more information, see What is Zero Trust?
In Azure, encryption keys can be either platform managed or customer managed.
Platform-managed keys (PMKs) are encryption keys generated, stored, and managed entirely by Azure. Customers do not interact with PMKs. The keys used for Azure Data Encryption-at-Rest, for instance, are PMKs by default.
Customer-managed keys (CMK), on the other hand, are keys read, created, deleted, updated, and/or administered by one or more customers. Keys stored in a customer-owned key vault or hardware security module (HSM) are CMKs. Bring Your Own Key (BYOK) is a CMK scenario in which a customer imports (brings) keys from an outside storage ___location into an Azure key management service (see the Azure Key Vault: Bring your own key specification).
A specific type of customer-managed key is the "key encryption key" (KEK). A KEK is a primary key that controls access to one or more encryption keys that are themselves encrypted.
Customer-managed keys can be stored on-premises or, more commonly, in a cloud key management service.
Azure key management services
Azure offers several options for storing and managing your keys in the cloud, including Azure Key Vault, Azure Key Vault Managed HSM, Azure Cloud HSM, and Azure Payment HSM. These options differ in terms of their FIPS compliance level, management overhead, and intended applications.
For a comprehensive guide to choosing the right key management solution for your specific needs, see How to Choose the Right Key Management Solution.
Azure Key Vault (Standard Tier)
A FIPS 140-2 Level 1 validated multitenant cloud key management service that can be used to store asymmetric keys, secrets, and certificates. Keys stored in Azure Key Vault are software-protected and can be used for encryption-at-rest and custom applications. Azure Key Vault Standard provides a modern API and a breadth of regional deployments and integrations with Azure Services. For more information, see About Azure Key Vault.
Azure Key Vault (Premium Tier)
A FIPS 140-3 Level 3 validated, PCI compliant, multitenant HSM offering that can be used to store asymmetric keys, secrets, and certificates. Keys are stored in a secure hardware boundary using Marvell LiquidSecurity HSMs*. Microsoft manages and operates the underlying HSM, and keys stored in Azure Key Vault Premium can be used for encryption-at-rest and custom applications. Azure Key Vault Premium also provides a modern API and a breadth of regional deployments and integrations with Azure Services. If you are an Azure Key Vault Premium customer looking for key sovereignty, single tenancy, and/or higher crypto operations per second, you may want to consider Azure Key Vault Managed HSM instead. For more information, see About Azure Key Vault.
Azure Key Vault Managed HSM
A FIPS 140-2 Level 3 validated, single-tenant HSM offering that gives customers full control of an HSM for encryption-at-rest, Keyless SSL/TLS offload, and custom applications. Azure Key Vault Managed HSM is the only key management solution offering confidential keys. Customers receive a pool of three HSM partitions—together acting as one logical, highly available HSM appliance—fronted by a service that exposes crypto functionality through the Key Vault API. Microsoft handles the provisioning, patching, maintenance, and hardware failover of the HSMs, but doesn't have access to the keys themselves, because the service executes within Azure's Confidential Compute Infrastructure. Azure Key Vault Managed HSM is integrated with the Azure SQL, Azure Storage, and Azure Information Protection PaaS services and offers support for Keyless TLS with F5 and Nginx. For more information, see What is Azure Key Vault Managed HSM?.
Azure Dedicated HSM
A FIPS 140-2 Level 3 validated single-tenant HSM offering that gives customers full control of an HSM for PKCS#11, offload SSL/TLS processing, certificate authority private key protection, transparent data encryption, including document and code signing, and custom applications. Customer has full administrative control of their HSM cluster. While customers own deployment and initialization of their HSM, Microsoft handles the service provisioning and hosting of the HSM. Azure Dedicated HSM supports existing use cases, including using lift-and-shift workloads, PKI, SSL Offloading and Keyless TLS, OpenSSL applications, Oracle TDE, and Azure SQL TDE IaaS. Azure Dedicated HSM is not integrated with any Azure PaaS offerings. For more information, see What is Azure Dedicated HSM?.
Azure Payment HSM
A FIPS 140-2 Level 3, PCI HSM v3, validated single-tenant bare metal HSM offering that lets customers lease a payment HSM appliance in Microsoft datacenters for payments operations, including payment PIN processing, payment credential issuing, securing keys and authentication data, and sensitive data protection. The service is PCI DSS, PCI 3DS, and PCI PIN compliant. Azure Payment HSM offers single-tenant HSMs for customers to have complete administrative control and exclusive access to the HSM. Once the HSM is allocated to a customer, Microsoft has no access to customer data. Likewise, when the HSM is no longer required, customer data is zeroized and erased as soon as the HSM is released, to ensure complete privacy and security is maintained. For more information, see What Is Azure Payment HSM?.
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* Azure Key Vault Premium allows the creation of both software-protected and HSM protected keys. If using Azure Key Vault Premium, check to ensure that the key created is HSM protected.
Pricing
The Azure Key Vault Standard and Premium tiers are billed on a transactional basis, with an extra monthly per-key charge for premium hardware-backed keys. Azure Key Vault Managed HSM, Azure Dedicated HSM, and Azure Payment HSM don't charge on a transactional basis; instead they are always-in-use devices that are billed at a fixed hourly rate. For detailed pricing information, see Key Vault pricing and Payment HSM pricing.
Service Limits
Azure Key Vault Managed HSM, Azure Dedicated HSM, and Azure Payment HSM offer dedicated capacity. Azure Key Vault Standard and Premium are multitenant offerings and have throttling limits. For service limits, see Key Vault service limits.
Encryption-At-Rest
Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM have integrations with Azure Services and Microsoft 365 for Customer Managed Keys, meaning customers may use their own keys in Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM for encryption-at-rest of data stored in these services. Azure Dedicated HSM and Azure Payment HSM are Infrastructure-as-Service offerings and do not offer integrations with Azure Services. For an overview of encryption-at-rest with Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM, see Azure Data Encryption-at-Rest.
APIs
Azure Dedicated HSM and Azure Payment HSM support the PKCS#11, JCE/JCA, and KSP/CNG APIs, but Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM do not. Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM use the Azure Key Vault REST API and offer SDK support. For more information on the Azure Key Vault API, see Azure Key Vault REST API Reference.