Trust at Every Hop: How mTLS in Splunk Enterprise 10.0 Makes Security Simpler

Security Kuntal Das

For years, many of us in the Splunk community have relied on transport layer security (TLS) to secure traffic between Splunk components—forwarders, indexers, search heads, and more. TLS did the job: encrypt traffic, authenticate the server, and move on. But as the world shifted—toward a Zero Trust framework, tighter compliance, and more aggressive cyber threats—the age-old question resurfaced: "How do I really know who’s on the other end of that connection?"

Enter Mutual TLS (mTLS). In a world where verifying the server alone isn't enough, mTLS takes things up a notch. It requires both the server and the client to prove their identity. Think of it as cryptographically enforced mutual trust.

From Idea to Implementation: Why Splunk Built mTLS into Splunk Enterprise 10.0

mTLS wasn’t just a checkbox feature. It was a response to what customers were asking for—and what regulators were starting to expect.

Here's what we heard:

So, we went to work. As of Splunk Enterprise 10.0, mTLS is now supported across 10 essential communication paths in your deployment—from forwarders and HTTP Event Collector (HEC) to clustered search heads and indexers.

The Certificate Conundrum (and How We Solved It)

We get it. When someone says “mTLS,” most admins think: "Ah, great…double the certificates, double the complexity." And yes, mTLS does need both sides to have certificates. That used to mean:

So, we tackled those, too:

In short, we're making mTLS secure and operationally manageable, even at an enterprise scale. This isn’t just a security feature—it’s a business enabler.

What’s Actually Supported?

With Splunk Enterprise 10.0, you can now turn mTLS on for these connections:

What's Out of Scope?

How mTLS Helps You Meet Regulatory and Security Goals

Whether you’re preparing for an audit, adopting Zero Trust, or securing traffic between different regions (e.g. EMEA and APAC) — mTLS is a smart move. And it aligns with major frameworks:

With mTLS built into Splunk Enterprise 10.0, you’re a big step closer to meeting all of these—without needing extra tooling or agents.

Getting Started Is Easier Than You Think

Here’s how to begin:

  1. Upgrade to Splunk 10.0 (available now)
  2. Identify your key traffic paths—forwarders, indexers, HEC endpoints
  3. Follow the public mTLS guide to test and secure your first channel
  4. Reach out to your Splunk rep if you want help with validating the applicability of mTLS in your current architecture.

You don’t have to turn everything on at once. Start with the most security-critical paths, validate, and expand from there.

What’s Next?

mTLS is just the beginning. Here’s what else is coming:

We're building toward a world where security is both strong and seamless.

The Bottom Line

You asked us for stronger, smarter security.

You asked us for easier certificate management.

You asked us for Zero Trust readiness, without turning the Splunk platform into a full-time cert babysitting job.

mTLS in Splunk Enterprise 10.0 is the answer.

You now have the power to verify every connection, reduce attack surfaces, and meet the bar that your regulators set—without the pain of legacy Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) operations.

Ready to explore more?

Let’s raise the bar—together.

Welcome to a more trusted Splunk.

Related Articles

Splunk’s Response to the SolarWinds Cyberattacks
Security
2 Minute Read

Splunk’s Response to the SolarWinds Cyberattacks

Although Splunk was not directly affected by the SolarWinds cyberattacks, as a leader in security we want to help the industry by providing tools, guidance and support to those impacted. Splunk's CISO Yassir Abousselham shares relevant information for customers and examples of how Splunk has taken action to better protect its business.
Detecting Remcos Tool Used by FIN7 with Splunk
Security
7 Minute Read

Detecting Remcos Tool Used by FIN7 with Splunk

The following is a walkthrough of Remcos executed via Attack Range Local. We will go over some of the multiple and intrusive operations this remote access tool can execute at compromised hosts.
Splunk SOAR Playbook of the Month: Investigations with Playbooks
Security
2 Minute Read

Splunk SOAR Playbook of the Month: Investigations with Playbooks

For this month’s edition of Playbook of the Month, we’ll look at how you can perform investigations at machine speed using Splunk SOAR and one of our investigation playbooks, Internal Host WinRM Investigate.