What a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner Actually Proves
Mohammed J. Razem
June 28, 2026
Updated on:
June 29, 2026
Every Drupal agency will tell you it has enterprise expertise. The claim costs nothing to make, which is why it is worth almost nothing on its own. The harder question, if you are a CTO about to commit budget and a roadmap to a vendor, is how to verify that expertise before you sign. A Drupal Diamond Certified Partner is one of the few signals you can check rather than take on faith, because the credential is earned through measured contribution to Drupal itself, not through how much Drupal someone has sold.
The badge is only useful, though, if you understand what it actually measures and where it stops. I should say plainly that Vardot is a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner, so I have a stake in this argument, and I would rather you weigh the credential on what it measures than take it on my word. This is my read on what Diamond certification tells you, what it does not, and the questions I would ask if I were the one evaluating agencies.
A Drupal Diamond Certified Partner is an agency that the Drupal Association places near the top of its six-tier Certified Partner program, awarded for measured contribution to Drupal rather than for sales. Diamond requires at least 5,000 weighted contribution credits a year and is re-evaluated annually. For a buyer, it signals proven delivery, deep platform expertise, and a lower failure rate than an unverified shop.
What a Drupal Diamond Certified Partner Actually Is
A Drupal Diamond Certified Partner is an agency that the Drupal Association has placed in the second-highest tier of its formal certification program, based entirely on its contributions to Drupal. The Drupal Association is the nonprofit that supports the project, keeps the software secure and free to download, and runs the surrounding ecosystem.
For most of Drupal's life, there was no formal way to tell reliable delivery partners apart from everyone else who claimed to do Drupal. The Drupal Certified Partner program, launched in 2021 and re-oriented in 2024, was built to close that gap.
The program rests on a contribution credit system, which, in my view,w is one of the best things that has happened to Drupal, because it is what turns an open-source project into a sustainable one. Credits are earned for the work that keeps Drupal alive: writing and maintaining code, fixing bugs, closing security issues, and building new features, along with community work like running events and mentoring, and financial sponsorship of the project. Both the people doing the work and the companies funding their time are credited for it.
Certification tiers map directly to that contribution. According to the Drupal Association, there are six tiers, set by weighted contribution credits earned over the trailing twelve months: Bronze at 150, Silver at 500, Gold at 1,000, Platinum at 2,500, Diamond at 5,000, and Top Tier at 12,000. Diamond sits at the top of that scale, second only to Top Tier. Tiers are awarded solely on credits and reassessed at each partner's annual renewal, so a firm has to keep contributing to keep the badge. It is not a one-time award.
That structure makes Diamond rare. When the Association re-launched the program in 2024, its Marketplace listed 2,283 companies, but only 591 of them contributed to Drupal at all in 2023, and the top 14% of those contributors produced 88% of all contributions. Diamond status places a firm in that small group at the top of measured contribution worldwide.
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What the Certification Measures, and What It Doesn't
Drupal certification is an attestation that a partner actually knows Drupal, not a marketing badge. That distinction is the whole point. There is a real difference between an agency that consumes Drupal, assembling and configuring what other people have built, and one that builds it, fixing the bugs, closing the security issues, and writing the features that everyone else then depends on.
Certification is how you tell them apart, because the tier is not based on how much Drupal you sold; nobody earns Diamond by closing more deals. It reflects how much Drupal you delivered and how much of the platform you helped build. In other words, the people behind a Diamond partner have worked on the engine, not just driven the car.
It is not always a question of price; a non-certified shop can sometimes cost more than a certified one, not less. What a certified partner reduces is something harder to price: failure rate.
You are buying proven expertise to deliver the cumulative history and judgment that comes from years inside the platform.
Why Diamond Was a Natural Step for Vardot
I want to be transparent about how we came to this, because it shapes how I read the credential. Vardot has been grounded in Drupal as a Drupal agency since 2013, and we have invested in the platform not only as software but as a community for as long as we have existed. We were active contributors long before there was a credit system to record it, so when the credit system arrived, we joined it, and when the certification program followed, we already qualified. We did not chase the badge; it followed from the work we were doing anyway.
That is also why I trust what the tier represents. Contributing to Drupal is not something we do on the side when a project wraps early; it is intentional and continuous, and we sometimes fund other people’s work on Drupal because it strengthens the platform we all build on.
Most recently, we became a Drupal AI Initiative Gold Sponsor, which means a full-time member of our team spends forty hours a week on Drupal AI rather than on client work, with no revenue attached to it. That is an investment in the software itself, and it is the same kind of work the certification is built to measure.
Where I Land: You Are Hiring the People Who Build the Engine
The reason certification matters is not the logo on the website. It is the same people who fix the bugs, close the security holes, and build the features in Drupal core who will diagnose and steward your platform, and the certification is the public, verifiable record of that work. This is the part a generic agency cannot replicate, because you cannot buy a contribution history; you can only earn one over the years. This applies to a category of firms and not to us alone.
Two comparisons capture it; The first is the watchmaker who builds movements by hand against the shop that assembles parts other people made; both will sell you a watch, but only one can tell you what is happening inside when something goes wrong.
The second is the specialist who helped build an engine against the mechanic who has only ever driven the car; only one of them can trace a problem to its root cause and fix it at the source.
A certified partner, and I mean firms in this category broadly, sits on the same side of both comparisons, and that capability is exactly what a contribution record demonstrates.
The pattern I see most often is consistent enough to be put plainly. A client comes to us with a Drupal site that was built by another agency. Sometimes they know it is sluggish but cannot say why. Our site audit exists for exactly this: it x-rays the build across roughly 180 checkpoints, covering architecture, modules, configuration, performance, security, hosting and infrastructure, accessibility, code quality, and governance, and tells you what you are actually sitting on.
One client had a site that another firm had spent about six months building. They suspected something was wrong, but could not articulate it. Our audit gave them a clear picture, and because they were not live yet, we were able to rebuild the whole thing properly in about six weeks.
I would not want to leave the impression that takeovers are always rescues. We also inherit well-built Drupal sites from other excellent certified firms, and when an audit comes back clean, that is good news for everyone, and it makes the site easier to steward going forward.
The audit is as useful for finding opportunities to grow a healthy site as it is for diagnosing a sick one. The point of certification is that it tells you, before you ever sign, which kind of partner you are dealing with.
Three Questions a CTO Should Ask Before Hiring a Drupal Agency
If you are evaluating Drupal agencies right now, three questions will separate real expertise from a sales pitch faster than any pitch deck. Ask all three, because each one tells you something the others cannot.
1. What Is Your Drupal Association Certification Level?
The Drupal Association tier is the first thing I would check, because a Diamond certification is a genuinely different thing from a Gold one, and the difference is measured in contribution, not marketing. Ask the agency to show you its listing on the Drupal.org Marketplace. This question tells you about organizational intent: whether the company has actually invested in the platform you are about to build your business on, or merely sells it.
2. How Many Acquia-Certified Developers Will Work on My Project?
Acquia certification is a separate credential, awarded to individual developers rather than to the company, so it answers a different question. The Drupal Association tier tells you about the organization; the count of Acquia-certified developers tells you about the specific people who will actually touch your project. Ask who is assigned to your work and what they are certified in.
3. Can You Share Case Studies and References From Clients Like Me?
References from comparable clients are the closest thing you have to a preview of your own engagement. Ask for case studies and for clients you can actually speak to, ideally ones whose needs resemble yours. A verified review platform like Clutch is useful here because the testimonials are confirmed with the client; our own Clutch profile, for instance, carries a 4.9 out of 5 rating based on more than 60 verified reviews. Treat any single source as one input among the three rather than the whole picture.
Put together, the three answers give you a full read: organizational intent in the platform, individual expertise on your team, and proven delivery with clients like you. Any single one of them can be dressed up. All three at once are hard to fake.
Where to Go From Here
If you have inherited a Drupal site and are not sure what you are sitting on, a site audit will give you the lay of the land before you commit to rebuilding it, fixing it, or carrying on. It is the same diagnostic we run for clients every week, and it draws on the same contribution to Drupal that the certification measures, so we are describing work we do, not only advice we give. If it would help to talk it through, we are glad to.
Mohammed Razem is a technologist and entrepreneur, and the CEO and founder of Vardot, a global agency that builds enterprise web solutions on Drupal and open source. He has been working with Drupal since 2007 and is a member of the Forbes Technology Council.
A Drupal Diamond Certified Partner is an agency placed in the second-highest tier of the Drupal Association's Certified Partner program. The tier is earned through measured contribution to Drupal, such as code, security fixes, community work, and sponsorship, rather than through sales. Diamond requires at least 5,000 weighted contribution credits a year, reassessed annually.
A Drupal agency becomes Diamond certified by earning at least 5,000 weighted contribution credits over the trailing twelve months, as scored by the Drupal Association. Credits come from contributing code, fixing bugs and security issues, building features, supporting community events and mentorship, and sponsoring the project. Certification also requires an annual business survey and a financial contribution scaled to company size.
Hiring a certified Drupal partner means hiring a firm whose contribution to Drupal core is publicly verifiable, which lowers the risk of the expensive, hard-to-diagnose problems that surface months into a build. A generic agency may cost the same or more without that record. Certification reflects proven delivery and platform expertise, not sales volume.
A CTO should ask three questions. First, what is your Drupal Association certification level, which shows organizational investment in the platform. Second, how many Acquia-certified developers will work on my project, which shows individual expertise. Third, can you share case studies and references from comparable clients, which shows proven delivery. Together they are hard to fake.