Guide

How to Choose a Medical Device OEM: ISO 13485 & GMP Checklist

A buyer's checklist for selecting a compliant medical device OEM partner—QMS maturity, documentation, pilot runs, and change control.

Selecting an OEM partner is a risk decision. A good manufacturer protects your timeline, brand, and compliance posture. A weak manufacturer creates delays, rework, and unpredictable outcomes.

Below is a checklist you can use when sourcing an OEM partner—especially if your target markets require strong quality expectations.

Step 1: Confirm the quality baseline

ISO 13485 certification

Ask for:

  • Certification scope (what sites and activities are covered)

  • Audit cadence and certification body details

  • Internal audit and management review cadence (high-level summary is enough)

GMP readiness

Depending on product category and market expectations:

  • Hygiene controls, controlled procedures, training records

  • Complaint handling and recall readiness (process-level discussion)

Step 2: Evaluate “how they run production”

Process control

Ask:

  • What are the critical-to-quality steps?

  • How do they prevent mix-ups and labeling errors?

  • How do they handle deviations and nonconformities?

Traceability

Ask:

  • Batch/lot traceability approach

  • Material receiving and supplier qualification workflow

  • Record retention approach

Step 3: Prototype and pilot run capability

Many OEM relationships fail at the handoff from “sample” to “scale.” Ask:

  • Do they have a structured sampling plan template?

  • What defines a successful pilot run?

  • How do they lock specs and manage revisions?

Step 4: Documentation deliverables

Ask the OEM to show sample templates (redacted is fine):

  • Inspection records and acceptance criteria

  • Batch records / production reports

  • Packaging and labeling control (artwork versioning, approvals, revision history)

Step 5: Change control and communication discipline

This is where long-term partnerships win:

  • Engineering change workflow and approvals

  • How they notify customers about changes

  • Lead time impacts and risk assessment process

Common red flags

  • “We can do anything” without asking about target market and specs

  • No clear answer on labeling/packaging control

  • Vague timelines that shift every week

  • No structured approach to sampling → pilot → scale

What to request in the first inquiry email

To get a fast, meaningful response, include:

  • Product category and target market

  • Desired packaging format

  • Estimated volume and timeline expectations

  • Any critical requirements (label languages, labeling constraints, etc.)


If you want a faster supplier evaluation, request a feasibility review with a short requirements pack and ask for MOQ + lead time + sampling milestones in writing.

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