The clock is ticking for contact centers. By the end of March 2025, PCI 4’s future-dated requirements will mandate that multi-factor authentication (MFA) is implemented across all access points into the network and Cardholder Data Environment (CDE). Whether it’s agents logging in remotely, vendors accessing systems, or admins managing operations, MFA will become a universal requirement across every endpoint in the contact center.
This shift is especially critical for work-at-home agent (WAHA) models, which many contact centers adopted during the pandemic. While WAHA has become more secure and efficient over time, PCI 4 introduces new, stricter security standards that add layers of complexity to managing remote teams. Let’s explore what this means for your operations—and your bottom line.
PCI 4 Requirement 8.4.2: MFA for CDE Access
The Payment Card Industry Security Standards Council (PCI SSC) has made one thing clear: MFA must be used for all access to the CDE.
Here’s what this means in practice:
This effectively eliminates the assumption that passing one MFA challenge grants access to everything. Every step into the network, CDE, or related applications now requires an independent completion of MFA.
PCI 4 Requirement 8.4.1: No Single Authentication Factor for Admin Access
Administrative access to the CDE is explicitly barred from relying on single-factor authentication. This applies across the board for all privileged users. Additionally, PCI SSC has noted that using one factor twice (for example, using two separate passwords) is not considered multi-factor authentication.
Check out this blog for a full breakdown of PCI 4 Requirement 8 on MFA for Network Access.
On paper, these changes seem straightforward, but in practice, they create significant security friction—the operational slowdown caused by increased authentication demands.
To meet PCI 4 requirements without sacrificing productivity, contact centers need an MFA solution that balances security and usability. Traditional MFA solutions, such as hardware tokens or SMS-based authentication, are not designed to handle the scale and complexity of contact centers.
Twosense Behavioral MFA offers a PCI-compliant solution tailored to the unique needs of contact centers. Here’s how it works:
The upcoming future-dated PCI 4 requirements demand more than just compliance—they require a rethink of how contact centers approach authentication. While traditional MFA solutions can create operational headaches, Twosense Behavioral MFA offers a secure, cost-effective alternative designed specifically for contact centers.
With Twosense, you can meet PCI 4 requirements for MFA everywhere without slowing down your business.