Training & Education
Training & Education
by Josh Manuel on Jan 28 2026
Updated January 2026
How to Properly Identify, Label, and Protect Controlled Unclassified Information
Physical Marking: Best Practices by Media Type
Executive Summary
Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) marking is one of the most misunderstood and under-implemented components of CMMC compliance. While organizations often invest heavily in cybersecurity, they frequently overlook the physical identification and marking of CUI — creating audit risk, operational confusion, and security gaps.
This CUI Marking Guide outlines the requirements, best practices, and implementation steps necessary to properly identify and label Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) based on the real-world practices auditors and assessors expect to see. It is designed for defense contractors, manufacturers, engineers, and regulated organizations that handle sensitive government information and must meet the requirements of NIST SP 800-171, DFARS 252.204-7012, and CMMC. Inside, you’ll find straightforward guidance, real-world examples, and implementation best practices to help your organization establish consistent CUI marking standards, reduce audit risk, and strengthen both physical and cybersecurity compliance.
1. What Is CUI — And Why Marking Matters
Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) is information the U.S. Government has determined requires safeguarding or dissemination controls, but does not meet the criteria for classification.
CUI exists across:
Engineering drawings
Manufacturing travelers
Technical manuals
Specifications
Contracts
Emails
Reports
CAD files
Quality records
Test data
Export-controlled materials
Why marking matters:
CUI marking is foundational to compliance and security.
If information isn’t clearly identified as CUI, then:
Employees don’t know how to handle it
Security controls can’t be applied properly
Auditors can’t verify compliance
Cybersecurity protections become misaligned
Organizations fail CMMC assessments
You cannot protect what you cannot clearly identify.
2. What Regulations Require CUI Marking?
CUI marking is governed by:
32 CFR Part 2002 – CUI Program
NIST SP 800-171 – Protecting CUI in Nonfederal Systems
DFARS 252.204-7012
CMMC 2.0
Key Requirements:
Organizations must:
Identify CUI
Mark it clearly
Protect it physically and digitally
Control dissemination
Train staff on handling
Marking is the trigger point that activates all downstream safeguards.
3. What Must Be Marked as CUI?
CUI applies to far more than just documents.
Common CUI Examples:
Physical Media
Printed documents
Drawings
Blueprints
Manuals
Test reports
Manufacturing travelers
Quality inspection records
Physical Artifacts
Parts or items manufactured/modified to meet military / space technical specifications
Digital Media
Computers
Servers
Hard drives
USB drives
CDs/DVDs
Backup tapes
Electronic Information
Emails
Shared folders
Cloud storage
CAD files
ERP systems
Facilities & Workspaces
CUI work areas
Engineering labs
Manufacturing floors
Secure rooms
If it provides access to CUI, it must be treated as CUI media.
4. Core CUI Marking Requirements
At minimum, CUI must be clearly labeled with:
Required Markings:
“CUI” banner marking
CUI category (e.g., ITAR, Export Controlled, Privacy)
Placement Guidelines:
Top and bottom of each page (documents)
Exterior of folders
Visible placement on storage media
Entry points of controlled areas
Key Rule:
Markings must be:
Clear
Visible
Durable
Consistent
5. Physical Marking: Best Practices by Media Type
Documents & Paper Files
Header/footer “CUI” labels
File folder labels
Coversheets for easy and immediate identification of CUI
Best Practice: Use CUI coversheets anytime documents leave controlled spaces.
Recommended Marking Solutions:CUI Document Labels, File Folder Labels, Coversheets.
Computers & Digital Media
Computer asset labels
USB / hard drive labels
Server cabinet signage
Best Practice: If a system stores, processes, or transmits CUI, it must be clearly labeled.
Recommended Marking Solutions:Computer & Asset Labels, USB & Digital Media Labels, Equipment Signage.
Manufacturing & Engineering Environments
Drawing racks
Workstation signage
Controlled production area signs
Traveler document labeling
Best Practice: Mark zones, not just documents.
Recommended Marking Solutions:Workstation Signs, Production Area Signage, Document & Traveler Labels.
Facilities & Rooms
Restricted area signage
Door labels
Access-controlled entry points
Best Practice: Anyone entering should instantly know CUI is present.
Recommended Marking Solutions:Restricted Area Signs, Door & Entryway Labels, Facility Signage.
6. Common CUI Marking Mistakes (That Cause Audit Failures)
Marking only the cover page
Forgetting digital assets
Unlabeled engineering workstations
No signage in CUI work areas
Inconsistent labeling across departments
Employees unsure what qualifies as CUI
Many CMMC failures happen not due to cybersecurity — but poor identification and marking.
7. A Simple 5-Step CUI Marking Program
Here’s a practical roadmap companies can actually follow:
Step 1 — Identify CUI Flow
Map:
Where CUI enters
Where it’s created
Where it flows
Where it’s stored
Step 2 — Define Marking Standards
Standardize:
Label designs
Placement rules
Handling procedures
Step 3 — Deploy Physical Marking
Apply:
Labels
Signs
Coversheets
Facility signage
Step 4 — Train Employees
Ensure staff understands:
What is CUI
How to recognize it
How to mark it
How to protect it
Step 5 — Self-Audit Regularly
Quarterly checks:
Spot inspections
Workspace audits
Document reviews
8. CUI Marking Checklist (Quick Reference)
Documents labeled
Folders labeled
Digital media labeled
Computers labeled
CUI rooms signed
Manufacturing areas signed
Transport coversheets used
Staff trained
9. How CUI Supply Simplifies Compliance
CUI Supply provides ready-to-deploy physical compliance solutions:
CUI document labels
Digital media labels
Computer labels
Coversheets
Restricted area signage
Manufacturing workstation signage
Full compliance kits
Our goal: Make compliance simple, fast, and audit-ready.
10. Final Takeaway
CUI marking is not a paperwork exercise or a compliance formality.
It is the foundation of CMMC compliance, the trigger for cybersecurity and physical security controls, and the front line of defense for protecting national security information.
When CUI is clearly identified and consistently marked, organizations gain control over information flow, reduce risk exposure, simplify audits, and dramatically improve security posture across both physical and digital environments.
When CUI is poorly marked or inconsistently handled, even the strongest cybersecurity investments fail to deliver real protection. Data moves without guardrails. Employees guess. Auditors flag gaps. Risk multiplies.
Clear marking creates clarity. Clarity creates accountability. Accountability creates security.
Organizations that treat CUI marking as a strategic priority—not just a compliance task—position themselves to pass assessments faster, reduce operational friction, and build trust with prime contractors and government partners.
If it is not clearly marked, it is not protected.And if it is not protected, it becomes a business, contractual, and national security risk.

