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Choosing the wrong Notified Body — or applying without understanding their scope — can cost you months and thousands of euros. This guide walks you through how to find, evaluate, and engage the right NB for your product and directive.
A Notified Body (NB) is an organisation designated by an EU member state to carry out third-party conformity assessment under specific EU legislation. Notified Bodies are independent, accredited organisations — not government agencies — that assess whether products meet EU safety and performance requirements before or during CE marking.
Not every CE marking route requires a Notified Body. But for higher-risk products — including Class IIa, IIb, and III medical devices, certain PPE categories, pressure equipment above specific thresholds, and machinery covered by Annex I of the Machinery Regulation — a Notified Body's involvement is legally mandatory.
Only bodies officially designated and listed in the NANDO database (New Approach Notified and Designated Organisations) can legally issue EU certificates. A certificate from a non-notified body has no legal validity for CE marking purposes.
You need a Notified Body when the applicable EU directive or regulation requires third-party conformity assessment for your product's risk class or category:
The official starting point is the NANDO database (ec.europa.eu/growth/tools-databases/nando). You can search by:
For medical devices, the EUDAMED database also lists designated NBs and their certification scope. Cross-referencing both is recommended for MDR/IVDR applications.
NANDO search returns Notified Bodies by their designation scope — which is critical. A body designated for Class IIa general medical devices is not necessarily designated for Class III implantables, even if they are the same organisation. Always verify the specific scope matches your product.
The NB must be designated for your exact directive, product category, and conformity assessment module. Verify this in NANDO against your specific product classification.
Ask directly: what is the current lead time from application to first review? For MDR devices, some NBs quote 12–18 months for initial assessment slots. This is the single biggest timeline driver.
NBs specialise. A body with deep experience in active implantables is different from one focused on IVD instruments. Match the NB's track record to your product type.
While the certificate is EU-wide, some NBs have stronger relationships with specific national competent authorities. This matters for post-market surveillance interactions.
Request a pre-submission meeting. Evaluate responsiveness, clarity of feedback, and how they handle questions. Poor NB communication can add months to your project.
NB fees vary significantly. Get detailed quotes — application review, audit fees, certificate issuance, annual surveillance fees, and additional charges for non-conformities found during review.
Since MDR 2017/745 came into full effect, the medical device industry has faced a significant Notified Body capacity crisis. Under the previous MDD, there were over 50 NBs designated for medical devices. Under MDR, fewer than 25 bodies are currently designated, with some having extremely limited capacity for complex devices.
The practical implications for manufacturers:
Most Notified Bodies offer (and often require) a pre-submission meeting before accepting a formal application. This meeting serves several purposes:
Prepare for the pre-submission meeting with a clear product description, intended purpose, risk classification justification, and a summary of your conformity assessment approach. A regulatory consultant can help structure this presentation effectively.
It is possible to transfer your certification from one Notified Body to another. Reasons include: NB losing its designation, better service or pricing elsewhere, or NB no longer covering your expanded product range.
The transfer process involves the new NB reviewing existing documentation and potentially conducting a partial or full reassessment. The outgoing NB must be notified. Plan for 3–6 months for a smooth transfer. Your product can remain on the market during the transfer if certificates remain valid.
Submit your request on ECP — describe your product, applicable directive, and device class. We match you with Notified Bodies and certification consultants who cover your specific scope.
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