Verification is confirmation through objective evidence that specified requirements have been fulfilled.
Complete Guide to Verification
Verification is a quality assurance process that provides documented evidence that a product, process, or design output meets its specified requirements. In medical device development, verification answers the question: "Did we build the product right?"
Design Verification:
Design verification confirms that design outputs meet design inputs through testing and inspection. This includes:
- Performance testing - Does the device meet functional specifications?
- Safety testing - Does it meet safety requirements?
- Biocompatibility testing - ISO 10993 requirements
- Electrical safety - IEC 60601 compliance
- EMC testing - Electromagnetic compatibility
- Sterility verification - For sterile devices
- Shelf life testing - Stability and packaging integrity
Key Differences: Verification vs Validation:
Verification:
- Confirms specifications are met
- "Did we build the product right?"
- Based on design inputs and outputs
- Uses objective testing and inspection
- Can be done in lab environment
- Typically occurs earlier in development
Validation:
- Confirms user needs are met
- "Did we build the right product?"
- Based on intended use and user requirements
- Uses clinical evaluation and real-world evidence
- Requires actual or simulated use conditions
- Typically occurs later, near product completion
Verification Activities:
1. Test Method Development:
- Define test protocols and procedures
- Establish acceptance criteria
- Identify required equipment and resources
- Qualify test methods
2. Test Execution:
- Follow approved protocols
- Document all test data
- Use calibrated equipment
- Maintain traceability to requirements
3. Data Analysis:
- Statistical evaluation of results
- Compare against acceptance criteria
- Identify out-of-specification results
- Determine pass/fail criteria
Regulatory Requirements:
- FDA 21 CFR 820.30(f) - Design verification required
- EU MDR Annex I - Verification of conformity
- ISO 13485:2016 Clause 7.3.5 - Design verification
- ISO 14971 - Verification of risk controls
Verification Documentation:
- Verification protocols and plans
- Test methods and specifications
- Raw test data and results
- Statistical analysis
- Verification reports
- Traceability matrices linking requirements to tests
Common Verification Standards:
- ISO 10993 - Biocompatibility testing
- IEC 60601-1 - Medical electrical equipment safety
- ISO 14971 - Risk management verification
- ASTM standards for material and mechanical testing
Proper verification ensures that design specifications are met before proceeding to validation and commercial manufacturing.
Related Terms
More Compliance & Standards
View allThe FDA's Quality System Regulation (QSR) that establishes current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) requirements for medical device manufacturers in the United States.
A systematic, independent examination of a Quality Management System to determine whether quality activities and results comply with planned arrangements and whether these arrangements are implemented effectively.
A systematic approach to investigating, correcting, and preventing quality problems in medical device manufacturing and operations.
A mandatory conformity marking for medical devices sold in the European Economic Area, indicating compliance with EU health, safety, and environmental requirements.
Need Help with Global Registration?
Pure Global provides regulatory consulting and AI-powered tools to help medical device companies navigate Global market access.

