Calibration Intervals for Measuring Equipment (ISO 9001)

Calibration Intervals for Measuring Equipment (ISO 9001)

ISO 9001 requires measuring equipment to be calibrated and traceable – but the standard does not fix exact intervals per instrument. You work risk-based: how critical is the measurement, how hard is the equipment used and what does the manufacturer say? Here are practical guidelines that work in audits in Nordic manufacturing and workshops.

What auditors want to see

  • Register of measuring equipment with unique ID
  • Calibration certificates or traceability to an accredited lab
  • Rationale for the chosen interval (risk, use, history)
  • Action if equipment is used without valid calibration

Recommended intervals (starting point)

InstrumentTypical intervalComment
Torque wrenches (critical)6–12 monthsShorter with heavy use or after drop
Micrometers, calipers6–12 monthsCleaning and storage affect stability
Multimeters, testers12 monthsVerify before important jobs
Pressure gauges6–12 monthsDepends on medium and wear

Always adjust from your own history: if an instrument often fails calibration – shorten the interval.

Risk factors that shorten the interval

  • Drops, impacts or repair without re-calibration
  • Extreme temperature, dust, vibration (site, foundry)
  • Measurement tied to customer approval or safety

Automate reminders

Excel and binders rarely scale past 50+ instruments. With calibration in Delatool you link equipment to tool ID, QR and reminders – same flow as service tracking. Avoid stopping production the week before an audit to chase certificates.

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