Prepare early. Transition with confidence. Strengthen quality governance.
The ISO 9001:2026 revision marks the first major update to the world's most widely used quality management standard since 2015. With the Final Draft International Standard (FDIS) now submitted for ballot, organizations have clear visibility into what is changing and why early preparation matters.
This update reflects today's quality reality: rising expectations around leadership accountability, organizational culture and ethics, sharper risk and opportunity thinking, and the integration of climate context into the management system.
Organizations certified to ISO 9001:2015 will be required to transition to ISO 9001:2026 to maintain certification. Acting early reduces risk, avoids last-minute pressure, and positions your organization to strengthen quality performance, governance, and stakeholder confidence.
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This course equips students with the essential knowledge to understand and interpret the updated requirements of ISO/FDIS 9001:2026.
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This course equips leaders with the knowledge to understand the proposed ISO 9001:2026 (FDIS) changes and their strategic implications for the Quality Management System.
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The current modular approach to gaining the skills to become an internal and lead auditor will help you to cover the latest changes.
FDIS submitted for ballot: April 15, 2026
Expected publication: September 2026
Expected transition period: 3 years from publication
During the transition period, certified organizations must transition from ISO 9001:2015 to ISO 9001:2026 to maintain certification. While formal transition rules will be issued after publication, the technical direction is now clear. Early preparation should focus on:
Staying closely aligned with your certification body ensures accurate guidance, avoids rework, and supports a confident transition.
The 2026 revision keeps the core requirements largely intact, but it raises the bar on what credible quality leadership and culture look like in practice.
Key themes introduced or strengthened include:
ISO 9001:2026 strengthens leadership accountability, quality culture, and risk clarity, and organizations will need to adapt, but the transition burden is modest for those already compliant with ISO 9001:2015.
Read more about the changes here
The Final Draft International Standard (FDIS) is the final stage in the ISO development process before publication. It confirms the technical content of ISO 9001:2026 in Clauses 1 to 10, meaning no major structural changes are expected between the FDIS and the final version. Work remaining is limited to editorial refinement and finalizing informative guidance such as Annex A.
The FDIS was submitted for ballot in spring 2026, with formal publication expected in September 2026. A three-year transition period is expected to begin once the new standard is published, subject to IAF confirmation.
The 2026 revision is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, giving organizations already certified to ISO 9001:2015 a manageable transition path. Rather than viewing the update as a compliance exercise, organizations should see it as an opportunity to better align quality management with other management system standards, strengthen integration across the organization, and embed quality more effectively into business operations and decision-making.
Now is the time to begin planning by reviewing the confirmed themes, understanding how quality culture and ethical behaviour will need to be demonstrated, and assessing any competence and training requirements. Organizations that take an early, strategic approach can use the transition to strengthen governance, improve alignment with environmental and other management systems, and increase the overall value delivered by their QMS.
Staying close to your certification body or engaging with ERM CVS will help ensure you receive accurate updates, practical guidance, and the support needed to prepare with confidence.
Staying close to your certification body or engaging with ERM CVS ensures you receive accurate updates and can prepare with confidence.
Wait until final publication happens, and stay informed through your certification body or with ERM CVS so formal QMS documentation updates are made based on the final, published text rather than the FDIS.
Early planning is recommended even with a three-year window to complete the full transition, so consider your certification life cycle but avoid leaving this until the last minute. Your initial focus should be on ensuring your internal audit and quality teams understand the confirmed direction of the revision.
The revised standard places greater emphasis on leadership commitment, ethical behaviour, and quality culture. Organizations should be prepared to demonstrate how quality expectations are communicated, understood, reinforced, and embedded across the business through leadership actions, awareness activities, training, employee engagement, and continual improvement practices.
As the ISO 9001:2026 revision sharpens expectations around quality culture, ethical behaviour, and risk and opportunity planning, organizations will need to update and strengthen internal competence to implement the changes effectively. This includes ensuring auditors are trained on the revised requirements so they can assess impacts, plan audits confidently, and support a smooth transition. It also extends to leadership and operational teams, who must understand their role in demonstrating quality culture in practice. ERM CVS will offer this training closer to publication.
Organizations already certified to ISO 9001:2015 should begin understanding the confirmed direction of the revision, particularly teams responsible for:
ISO 9001:2026 is relevant across all sectors, but early preparation may be particularly valuable for organizations operating in:
ISO 9001:2026 should be viewed as a business improvement opportunity, not simply a compliance exercise.