Selecting the right EMC testing laboratory is one of the most consequential decisions in your product's compliance program. The wrong choice can cost you months of delay and significant rework expense. This guide covers every factor that matters when evaluating a testing partner for FCC, CE marking, medical device, and international compliance.
ISO/IEC 17025:2017 accreditation by a recognized national accreditation body is the minimum requirement for any EMC laboratory producing test reports for regulatory submissions. It is not a quality preference — it is a regulatory requirement for CE marking, FCC equipment authorization, FDA 510(k), and virtually every other global market access program.
The primary accreditation body for EMC testing laboratories in the US. Verify the lab's NVLAP Lab Code and that specific standards you need are listed in the current published scope PDF.
Compatible Electronics: NVLAP Lab Code 200527-0
NVLAP-accredited labs are automatically ILAC MRA recognized. This means test reports are accepted by EU market surveillance for CE marking Declarations of Conformity without additional documentation.
For medical device testing — verify TL-80 (IEC 60601-1 safety), TL-81 (IEC 60601-1-2 EMC), TL-82 (IEC 61010-2-101 IVD). ASCA recognition accelerates FDA 510(k) review.
Compatible Electronics: TL-80, TL-81, TL-82 recognized
An NVLAP-accredited laboratory is only accredited for the specific test methods listed in its scope of accreditation — not for all EMC tests. This is the most commonly overlooked factor in lab selection. Before committing:
🔎 How to check: Visit the NVLAP online database at nist.gov/nvlap and search for the lab's Lab Code. Download the current scope PDF and verify that your specific standard version is listed (e.g., "EN 55032 (2015)+A11(2020)" not just "EN 55032"). Accreditation is site-specific — verify all three locations if needed.
Ask the lab to send you the current NVLAP scope PDF and point to the specific entry covering your standards. If they cannot do this, that is the answer.
For CE marking: will EU market surveillance accept your reports for a Declaration of Conformity? Ask for confirmation, not just an assertion.
Verify in the FDA ASCA database directly — not from the lab's marketing materials. Recognition must be current at the time of testing.
This is standard practice at reputable labs. Refusal or unusual restrictions are a significant red flag.
Experienced labs structure this routinely. If the lab cannot explain how ANSI C63.4 data satisfies FCC + EN 55032 + ICES-003 simultaneously, they lack the multi-market experience you need.
If a lab cannot immediately provide their current NVLAP scope PDF showing your specific standard versions, their accreditation either does not cover what you need or may not be current.
Some labs "self-declare" ISO 17025 compliance without actual national body accreditation. Ask for the lab code and verify independently on the accreditation body's website.
Significantly below-market pricing typically indicates uncalibrated equipment, unaccredited test methods, or reports not actually issued under accreditation. The cost of a failed regulatory submission far exceeds any lab fee savings.
Pre-compliance sessions using consumer spectrum analyzers in a non-anechoic environment produce data with poor correlation to formal test results. This false confidence is worse than no pre-compliance data.
ISO/IEC 17025:2017 requires measurement uncertainty documentation. Its absence strongly suggests the report was not issued under accreditation, regardless of what the letterhead says.
A lab that can only produce a pass/fail result but cannot help diagnose failures leaves you with expensive retest cycles. The most valuable labs have engineers who can identify root causes and evaluate fixes in-session.
ISO/IEC 17025:2017 at Lake Forest/Silverado, Brea, and Newbury Park — three accredited locations.
Test reports accepted by EU market surveillance for CE marking Declarations of Conformity.
ASCA-recognized for IEC 60601-1 safety, IEC 60601-1-2 EMC, and IEC 61010-2-101 IVD safety.
EMC emissions, immunity, product safety, wireless/RF — broad scope for multi-standard programs.
CISPR chambers and IEC 61000-4 instruments used for both pre-compliance and formal testing.
Founded 1985 — helping manufacturers meet their market window for four decades.
Contact us to schedule a facility tour, request a quote, or ask any accreditation questions — three Southern California locations.
Brea: 714‑579‑0500 · Newbury Park: 805‑480‑4044
www.celectronics.com