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Privileged Access Management (PAM) Policy

1. Purpose

The purpose of this Privileged Access Management (PAM) Policy is to establish requirements for the management, control, monitoring, and protection of privileged accounts and elevated access rights within the organization.

Privileged accounts possess elevated permissions that can significantly impact the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of organizational systems and information. Misuse, compromise, or unauthorized use of privileged access can result in data breaches, operational disruptions, regulatory violations, and security incidents.

This policy establishes controls designed to minimize risks associated with privileged access and ensure privileged activities are properly governed, monitored, and audited.

2. Scope

This policy applies to:

  • All employees
  • Contractors
  • Consultants
  • Temporary personnel
  • Interns
  • Third-party personnel with privileged access to organizational resources

This policy applies to all privileged accounts, including:

  • System administrator accounts
  • Domain administrator accounts
  • Network administrator accounts
  • Cloud administrator accounts
  • Database administrator accounts
  • Security administrator accounts
  • Application administrator accounts
  • Service accounts with elevated privileges
  • Emergency access accounts
  • Vendor administrative accounts

The policy applies to all organizational systems, applications, networks, cloud environments, databases, and information assets.

3. Policy Statement

The organization shall implement and maintain controls to manage privileged access in accordance with the principles of least privilege, need-to-know, segregation of duties, and accountability.

Privileged access shall be granted only when necessary to perform authorized business functions and shall be subject to enhanced security controls, monitoring, and periodic review.

All privileged activities shall be appropriately authorized, documented, and monitored.

4. Objectives

The objectives of this policy are to:

  • Protect privileged accounts from compromise.
  • Reduce risks associated with excessive permissions.
  • Enforce least privilege principles.
  • Improve accountability for administrative activities.
  • Support monitoring and auditability.
  • Reduce insider and external threat risks.
  • Strengthen access governance.
  • Support compliance obligations.

5. Definitions

Privileged Account

An account that possesses elevated permissions capable of modifying systems, security settings, configurations, user accounts, applications, or sensitive information.

Privileged Access

Access rights that exceed those granted to standard users and allow administrative, security, operational, or management functions.

Privileged Access Management (PAM)

A set of policies, processes, and technologies used to secure, manage, monitor, and control privileged access.

Least Privilege

The principle of granting only the minimum permissions required to perform authorized duties.

Emergency Access Account

A privileged account reserved for emergency situations or business continuity purposes.

Service Account

A non-human account used by applications, services, or automated processes.

6. Roles and Responsibilities

Executive Management

Responsible for:

  • Supporting privileged access governance.
  • Providing resources necessary for PAM operations.
  • Reviewing significant privileged access risks.

Information Security Team

Responsible for:

  • Establishing PAM requirements.
  • Monitoring privileged access controls.
  • Reviewing privileged access risks.
  • Investigating privileged activity anomalies.
  • Managing policy compliance.

Information Technology Team

Responsible for:

  • Implementing PAM controls.
  • Managing privileged accounts.
  • Supporting privileged access reviews.
  • Maintaining PAM technologies.

Managers and Supervisors

Responsible for:

  • Approving privileged access requests.
  • Verifying business need.
  • Supporting periodic access reviews.

Privileged Users

Responsible for:

  • Using privileged access appropriately.
  • Following security requirements.
  • Protecting privileged credentials.
  • Reporting suspected compromise or misuse.

7. Privileged Access Management Program

The organization shall maintain a Privileged Access Management Program that includes:

  • Privileged account governance
  • Access approval processes
  • Privileged account inventory
  • Authentication controls
  • Monitoring and logging
  • Credential management
  • Access reviews
  • Incident response integration

The program shall be reviewed periodically for effectiveness.

8. Privileged Account Inventory

The organization shall maintain an inventory of privileged accounts.

The inventory shall include, where applicable:

  • Account identifier
  • Assigned owner
  • Business purpose
  • System association
  • Access level
  • Review status

Privileged accounts without documented ownership shall be investigated and remediated.

9. Privileged Access Authorization

Privileged access shall be granted only after:

  • Business justification is provided.
  • Appropriate approvals are obtained.
  • Access requirements are validated.
  • Risk considerations are evaluated.

Privileged access shall not be granted solely for convenience.

10. Least Privilege Requirements

Privileged users shall be granted only the permissions necessary to perform authorized responsibilities.

Permissions shall:

  • Be role-based where feasible.
  • Be limited to business needs.
  • Be reviewed periodically.
  • Be removed when no longer required.

Excessive privileges shall be reduced promptly.

11. Segregation of Duties

Privileged access assignments shall support segregation of duties whenever feasible.

Conflicting responsibilities shall be identified and managed to reduce risks involving:

  • Fraud
  • Unauthorized activity
  • Security control bypass
  • Operational errors

Compensating controls may be implemented where segregation is impractical.

12. Separate Administrative Accounts

Personnel performing administrative functions shall use separate privileged accounts whenever feasible.

Users shall:

  • Use standard accounts for routine activities.
  • Use privileged accounts only when administrative functions are required.

Administrative accounts shall not be used for routine email, web browsing, or general productivity activities.

13. Multi-Factor Authentication

Multi-factor authentication shall be required for privileged accounts whenever technically feasible.

MFA shall be enforced for:

  • Administrative access
  • Remote privileged access
  • Cloud administration
  • Security administration
  • High-risk systems

Exceptions shall require documented approval and compensating controls.

14. Privileged Credential Protection

Privileged credentials shall be protected against unauthorized access and disclosure.

Protection measures may include:

  • Credential vaulting
  • Encryption
  • Secure storage
  • Access restrictions
  • Credential rotation

Privileged credentials shall not be shared except through approved mechanisms.

15. Password Requirements for Privileged Accounts

Privileged account passwords shall comply with organizational password requirements and may be subject to enhanced controls.

Requirements may include:

  • Increased password length
  • Strong password complexity
  • Password vault management
  • Additional monitoring

Privileged passwords shall receive greater protection than standard user credentials.

16. Service Accounts with Elevated Privileges

Privileged service accounts shall:

  • Have documented ownership.
  • Be assigned only required permissions.
  • Use strong authentication credentials.
  • Be reviewed periodically.

Service account privileges shall be minimized whenever possible.

17. Temporary Privileged Access

Temporary privileged access may be granted when necessary for approved business purposes.

Temporary access shall:

  • Be documented.
  • Have defined expiration dates.
  • Be reviewed periodically.
  • Be removed promptly when no longer required.

Time-limited access shall be preferred where feasible.

18. Emergency Access Accounts

Emergency access accounts shall be established only when necessary.

Emergency access controls shall include:

  • Restricted usage
  • Enhanced monitoring
  • Secure credential storage
  • Post-use review

Emergency access shall be used only during approved circumstances.

19. Privileged Session Management

Privileged sessions may be subject to additional controls.

Controls may include:

  • Session monitoring
  • Session recording
  • Command logging
  • Activity tracking
  • Session termination controls

Monitoring shall be performed in accordance with applicable laws and organizational policies.

20. Monitoring and Logging

Privileged activities shall be logged and monitored.

Logged events may include:

  • Administrative logins
  • Privilege escalations
  • Configuration changes
  • Security control modifications
  • Account management activities
  • Sensitive system access

Privileged activity logs shall receive heightened protection.

21. Periodic Access Reviews

Privileged access shall be reviewed periodically.

Reviews shall evaluate:

  • Continued business need
  • Access appropriateness
  • Role alignment
  • Account ownership
  • Segregation of duties concerns

Unnecessary privileged access shall be removed promptly.

22. Third-Party Privileged Access

Third-party personnel requiring privileged access shall be subject to the same security requirements as internal personnel.

Third-party privileged access shall:

  • Be approved
  • Be documented
  • Be monitored
  • Be periodically reviewed
  • Be revoked when no longer required

Third-party access shall be limited to authorized activities.

23. Privileged Access Revocation

Privileged access shall be removed promptly when:

  • Employment terminates
  • Contracts expire
  • Job responsibilities change
  • Business need no longer exists
  • Security concerns arise

Access revocation activities shall be documented.

24. Security Incident Response

Suspected misuse or compromise of privileged access shall be treated as a high-priority security incident.

Response activities may include:

  • Access suspension
  • Credential resets
  • Investigation
  • Forensic analysis
  • Corrective actions

Privileged account incidents shall be investigated promptly.

25. Compliance and Auditing

Compliance with this policy shall be verified through:

  • Access reviews
  • Internal audits
  • External audits
  • Security assessments
  • Privileged account evaluations

Findings shall be documented and addressed through corrective action processes.

26. Exceptions

Exceptions to this policy must:

  • Be documented
  • Include business justification
  • Include risk assessment
  • Identify compensating controls
  • Be approved by management
  • Be reviewed periodically

Temporary exceptions shall include expiration dates.

27. Enforcement

Violations of this policy may result in:

  • Removal of privileged access
  • Suspension of accounts
  • Disciplinary action
  • Contract termination
  • Legal action where applicable

28. Review and Maintenance

This policy shall be reviewed:

  • At least annually
  • Following significant security incidents
  • Following major technology changes
  • Following regulatory changes
  • Following updates to privileged access management processes

Updates shall be approved by executive management.

29. Related Policies

  • Information Security Policy
  • Identity and Access Management Policy
  • Access Control Policy
  • Password Policy
  • Multi-Factor Authentication Policy
  • Security Monitoring and Logging Policy
  • Incident Response Policy
  • Security Governance Policy

30. Policy Approval

Policy Owner: Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) or Information Security Manager

Approved By: Executive Management

Effective Date: __________________

Review Date: __________________

Version: 1.0