Is Fedora 35 patched?
Current stable (44): 100/100
Summary iPlain-English security status for Fedora 35, built from its CVEs, active-exploitation data, end-of-life date and latest release.
Fedora 35 is part of the 35 release line. 14 known vulnerabilities affect it. The 35 line reached end-of-life on 2022-12-13, so it no longer receives security patches. The latest supported Fedora release is 44.
Known issues affecting 35
Exploited first, then by exploitation probability.
CVE-2016-7103 MEDIUM EPSS 23% → see advisory CVE-2010-5312 MEDIUM EPSS 18% → see advisory CVE-2016-1247 HIGH EPSS 5% → see advisory CVE-2016-9446 HIGH EPSS 4% → see advisory CVE-2018-20545 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2016-9811 MEDIUM EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2018-20546 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2019-7282 MEDIUM EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2018-20549 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2018-20548 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2018-20547 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2020-6860 HIGH EPSS 2% → see advisory CVE-2019-8379 HIGH EPSS 1% → see advisory CVE-2018-13405 HIGH EPSS 1% → see advisoryOther Fedora versions
Check another release line of Fedora.
Frequently asked
Is Fedora 35 patched?
Fedora 35 is end-of-life and no longer receives security patches. Move to 44.
When does Fedora 35 reach end-of-life?
Fedora 35 reached end-of-life on 2022-12-13 and no longer receives security patches.
What is the latest version of Fedora?
The latest supported Fedora release is 44.
Is Fedora 35 still receiving security updates?
No — Fedora 35 is on the 35 line, which reached end-of-life on 2022-12-13 and no longer receives security updates. Upgrade to 44 or later to stay supported.
Informational only, from public data (NVD · CISA KEV · EPSS · endoflife.date), and can lag or miss vendor-specific fixes. Always confirm against Fedora Project's official advisory before you patch or upgrade — Fedora official site ↗