Certification Body Accreditation Standards

Accreditation of certification bodies establishes the formal basis for trusting that a third-party auditor is competent, impartial, and operating under internationally recognized requirements. This page covers the regulatory frameworks, structural mechanisms, and classification boundaries that govern how certification bodies earn and maintain accreditation in the United States. Understanding these standards is essential for organizations selecting a third-party certification body or verifying that audit results will satisfy federal, contractual, or industry-specific obligations.

Definition and scope

Certification body accreditation is a formal recognition — issued by an accreditation body — that a conformity assessment organization meets the requirements of a published international standard, typically ISO/IEC 17021-1 for management system certification bodies or ISO/IEC 17065 for product, process, and service certification bodies. Accreditation is distinct from certification: a certification body issues certificates to client organizations; an accreditation body evaluates the certification body itself.

In the United States, the primary national accreditation body recognized by the federal government is the ANSI National Accreditation Board (ANAB), a subsidiary of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). A second significant body is Perry Johnson Laboratory Accreditation (PJLA), though ANAB holds the dominant position for management system programs. ANAB is also a signatory to the International Accreditation Forum (IAF) Multilateral Recognition Arrangement (MLA), which means accreditation granted under ANAB carries cross-border recognition in over 100 signatory economies.

The scope of accreditation is always program-specific. A certification body may hold ANAB accreditation for ISO 9001 (quality management) but not for ISO 27001 (information security), even if the same legal entity delivers both programs. Buyers of certification services should verify that accreditation scope matches the specific standard being pursued.

How it works

The accreditation process follows a structured lifecycle with discrete phases:

  1. Application — The certification body submits a formal application to ANAB (or another IAF-recognized accreditation body), declaring the standards and industry sectors it intends to cover.
  2. Document review — ANAB evaluates the applicant's quality manual, impartiality committee procedures, auditor competency records, and subcontracting policies against ISO/IEC 17021-1 or the applicable ISO/IEC 17065 requirements.
  3. Witness audit — ANAB assessors observe the certification body conducting a live client audit to verify that field practice matches documented procedures. This phase is mandatory and cannot be waived.
  4. Accreditation committee decision — An independent committee reviews assessment findings and grants, defers, or denies accreditation. Any nonconformity must be closed before a positive decision is issued.
  5. Surveillance — Accreditation is not a one-time event. ANAB conducts annual surveillance assessments and a full re-accreditation cycle every four years (ANAB Accreditation Rules, AR 3001).
  6. Expansion or reduction — A certification body may apply at any time to expand its accreditation scope to new standards or sectors, triggering an abbreviated review of competency evidence for the new scope.

Impartiality is a core structural requirement throughout. ISO/IEC 17021-1 Section 5 mandates that certification bodies identify, analyze, and document all threats to impartiality on an ongoing basis. An accreditation body's assessors verify impartiality controls during every assessment cycle.

Common scenarios

ISO management system certification programs represent the highest-volume accreditation category in the US. Organizations pursuing ISO 9001, ISO 14001, ISO 45001, or ISO 27001 certificates must use an ANAB-accredited (or equivalent IAF MLA signatory-accredited) certification body if they intend for those certificates to carry international recognition or satisfy procurement requirements.

Federal regulatory programs sometimes require accreditation under agency-specific rules rather than pure IAF channels. The Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) maintains its own Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory (NRTL) program under 29 CFR 1910.7, which accredits product safety testing and certification organizations independently of ANAB. NRTL accreditation is required when certifying electrical equipment for workplace safety compliance — ANAB management system accreditation does not substitute.

Food safety and agricultural programs operate under the USDA National Organic Program (NOP) and the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), each of which establishes accreditation requirements for third-party auditors distinct from ISO 17021 channels.

The certification audit process and the resulting certificate are only as credible as the accreditation standing of the issuing body. Buyers should check ANAB's public registry — searchable at anab.ansi.org — to confirm active accreditation status before accepting a certificate.

Decision boundaries

Choosing whether accredited certification is required versus optional depends on three criteria:

A non-accredited certification body can legally operate and issue certificates in the US. Those certificates may satisfy internal purposes but will not satisfy import requirements in IAF MLA signatory countries or US federal procurement clauses requiring accredited third-party certification. The distinction matters practically: organizations building network compliance documentation for regulated industries must verify the accreditation chain before relying on a certificate as compliance evidence.

References

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log