Overview
When your Identity Provider certificate is about to expire or has already expired, you need to update it in your Salesforce SSO (Single Sign-On) settings. SSO is an authentication method that allows users to access Salesforce using credentials from an external identity provider rather than a Salesforce-specific username and password. The certificate used in SSO settings authenticates the identity provider using SAML (Security Assertion Markup Language), which is a standard protocol for exchanging authentication and authorization data between an identity provider and a service provider.
The Identity Provider certificate is shared by the IDP (Identity Provider) team and needs to be uploaded in Salesforce under the Single Sign-On Settings. If the certificate is going to expire soon or has already expired, the Identity Provider team (third party) will get a new certificate issued and share it with the Salesforce System Admin of your company.
Why This Matters
SAML certificates have expiration dates for security purposes. When a certificate expires, users will be unable to authenticate via SSO, resulting in login failures and productivity disruptions.
Who This Affects
This affects organizations using SAML-based Single Sign-On with an external identity provider such as:
Prerequisites
Before replacing an expired or expiring SSO certificate, ensure you have:
Access & Permissions
Certificate Requirements
Coordination
Replacing an Identity Provider Certificate (Most Common)
Note: File uploaded in step (2) should be of extension : .crt or .cer
Trailblazer Community - Generated and replaced SSO cert but not able to delete expiring cert
FAQs for Single Sign-On
Error 'You have one or more certificates in your Salesforce org that will expire soon'
000386054

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