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Cisco SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245: Patch the KEV Privilege Escalation

Cisco SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245 patch checklist for management access, fixed software, edge configuration review, and verification

Cisco SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245 patch checklist for management access, fixed software, edge configuration review, and verification

Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager CVE-2026-20245 is now in CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog. CISA added the issue on June 9, 2026, with a due date of June 23, 2026 for covered federal systems. The official CVE and NVD records describe a Cisco SD-WAN Manager privilege escalation issue that can let a netadmin-level attacker reach root on an affected manager.

This matters for larger businesses, managed service providers, hosting networks, and distributed offices because SD-WAN Manager controls policy and configuration for edge devices. Cisco’s CVE text says it has observed limited cases where exploitation of this bug resulted in a configuration change pushed to edge devices, so the job is not just patching the manager. It is also checking whether the fabric changed unexpectedly.

This is a protect-only guide. It explains the safe update, management-plane review, and post-patch validation path without publishing abuse details or operational steps that would help someone target a live SD-WAN manager.

What is affected

The official CVE record lists Cisco Catalyst SD-WAN Manager, formerly SD-WAN vManage, across many affected release trains. Because the affected-version list is long, use Cisco’s security advisory and fixed-software table as the source of truth for your exact train and maintenance path.

Why this is urgent

What to do now

  1. Inventory SD-WAN Manager instances. Include production, staging, disaster-recovery, lab, and customer-managed deployments.
  2. Confirm the running version and train. Match it against Cisco’s advisory and fixed-software table.
  3. Back up before maintenance. Save manager configuration, templates, policy, certificates, controller state, and any change-control evidence you normally require.
  4. Restrict management access. Keep SD-WAN Manager behind trusted admin networks, VPN, bastion hosts, and MFA-backed identities. Remove direct internet exposure where it exists.
  5. Apply the Cisco fixed software path. Follow the vendor-supported upgrade or patch route for the exact release train instead of improvising around the manager.
  6. Review edge-device changes. Compare recent templates, policy pushes, device configuration changes, routing changes, segmentation changes, and administrator activity.
  7. Audit privileged accounts. Review netadmin users, automation accounts, stale local accounts, API users, emergency accounts, and identity-provider groups that can reach SD-WAN Manager.
  8. Verify the fabric after patching. Confirm controllers, edges, tunnels, routing, segmentation, monitoring, backups, and customer or branch connectivity are normal.

Hosting and MSP notes

If SD-WAN Manager supports customer locations, office networks, data-center access, remote support, backup replication, or private cloud connectivity, plan this as a management-plane maintenance window. Tell affected teams what might flap, which sites are in scope, how rollback will work, and who is watching edge-device health during the change.

For MSPs, the review should include customer-impact notes. A small SD-WAN policy or route change can look like an application outage to the customer. After patching, verify not only that the manager is fixed, but that the expected customer paths and segmentation still match the documented design.

Post-patch verification checklist

Related Fix I.T. Phill reading

Sources

Need help planning an SD-WAN Manager patch window or checking whether edge-device configuration changed unexpectedly? Fix I.T. Phill can help review the manager, coordinate the maintenance window, and verify the fabric afterward.

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