ISO 9001:2026 is in the final stages of development. As of May 2026, the revision is at Stage 40 (Enquiry) — Draft International Standard ISO/DIS 9001 has been published and is undergoing public ballot. The final standard is expected to be published in approximately September 2026, with a 3-year transition window for existing certified organisations.
This page provides Qatar organisations with advance guidance on the anticipated changes, transition timeline, and Guardian’s recommended approach — enabling early planning ahead of formal publication.
Cross-reference: This is the Transition Page. For the current ISO 9001:2015 Standard page (full requirements, sectors, certification pathway),
see page → ISO 9001 Quality Management Qatar
Field | Value |
URL | /standards/iso-9001-2026-transition/ |
Wave / Sequence | Wave 6 · Round 1b · V1.1 (tagline removed) |
Pillar | Standards Library — Transition Pages |
Tier | Tier 1 — QS RB066-26 + UAF/IAS |
Page Type | Transition Page — Pre-publication draft |
Priority | Critical · Pre-publication for SEO momentum |
Primary Keyword | ISO 9001:2026 transition Qatar |
Word Count Target | ~3,200 words (Transition pattern T1-T15) |
Document Reference | GME-WEB-W6-R01b-V1.1 |
Issue Date | 04 May 2026 |
Item | Status |
Current edition | ISO 9001:2015 + Amendment 1:2024 (Climate Action) |
Successor edition | ISO 9001:2026 (expected) |
Current ISO stage | Stage 40 (Enquiry) — ISO/DIS 9001 published August 2025 |
Expected publication | Approximately September 2026 (Stage 60) |
Expected transition deadline | Approximately September 2029 (3-year window from publication) |
Existing certificates valid until | Approximately September 2029, OR earlier expiry of 3-year cycle, whichever is sooner |
Affected organizations | All organizations holding ISO 9001:2015 certification (~1.6M globally) |
Guardian transition support | Available now for clients planning ahead of publication |
Tier | Tier 1 — QS RB066-26 + UAF/IAS dual accreditation (issued by Guardian Assessment under IAF MLA recognition) |
Based on ISO/DIS 9001 (August 2025) and ISO TC 176 working commentary, the following changes are anticipated. Final standard text may differ — this page will be updated upon Stage 60 publication.
Leadership requirements (Clause 5) are expected to expand explicit references to organisational culture, ethical conduct, and accountability. This recognises that quality outcomes are fundamentally driven by culture and behaviour, not just process compliance.
Quality objectives and decision-making (Clauses 6 and 9) are expected to require greater integration of sustainability considerations. This goes beyond the current climate-change requirement (Amendment 1:2024) to include broader environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations where relevant to interested parties.
New requirements expected around the verification, validation, and control of artificial intelligence (AI), automation, and digital tools used within the QMS. Organisations using AI for quality monitoring, decision support, or customer interaction may need explicit governance documentation.
Risk-based thinking (Clause 6.1) expected to be more explicitly linked to operational planning (Clause 8.1), strengthening the connection between strategic risk identification and day-to-day operations.
Externally provided processes, products, and services (Clause 8.4) expected to receive enhanced requirements around supply chain resilience, multi-tier supplier visibility, and continuity planning.
The climate change requirements added by Amendment 1:2024 are expected to be consolidated into the main standard text rather than remaining as a separate amendment.
Clause structure expected to align with the latest ISO Harmonised Structure (HS) terminology, replacing some current language with refreshed common text shared across all ISO management system standards.
Performance evaluation (Clause 9) expected to add or strengthen requirements around stakeholder needs/expectations in management reviews — building on the change introduced in ISO/IEC 27001:2022.
Anticipated clause-level comparison between ISO 9001:2015 (current) and ISO 9001:2026 (DIS-based projection). Final standard may differ.
Clause | ISO 9001:2015 (current) | ISO 9001:2026 (anticipated) |
4.1 Context | Internal/external issues · Climate change relevance (Amd 1:2024) | Internal/external issues · Climate change consolidated · Broader sustainability context expected |
4.2 Interested Parties | Identification of interested parties and their requirements | Same · Strengthened ESG-related requirements consideration expected |
5 Leadership | Top management commitment · Quality policy · Roles and responsibilities | Same · Expected addition: explicit culture and ethics requirements |
6.1 Risk | Actions to address risks and opportunities | Same · Stronger linkage to operational planning expected |
7 Support | Resources · Competence · Awareness · Communication · Documented info | Same · Expected: specific governance for AI/digital tools used in QMS |
8.4 External Provision | Control of externally provided processes, products, services | Same · Expected: enhanced supply chain resilience requirements |
9 Performance | Monitoring · Customer satisfaction · Internal audit · Management review | Same · Stakeholder needs in management review (likely) |
10 Improvement | Continual improvement · Nonconformity and corrective action | Same · Likely no significant change |
Disclaimer: Comparison based on ISO/DIS 9001 (August 2025) and TC 176 working commentary. Final published standard may include additional or different changes. Definitive comparison will be published upon Stage 60 publication.
Anticipated timeline assuming Stage 60 publication in September 2026:
Date (anticipated) | Milestone |
August 2025 | ISO/DIS 9001 published (Stage 40 Enquiry begins) |
Q2 2026 | Anticipated: ISO/FDIS 9001 published (Stage 50 Approval) |
September 2026 | Anticipated: ISO 9001:2026 published (Stage 60 — current edition) 3-year transition window begins |
Q4 2026 onwards | Guardian begins offering ISO 9001:2026 transition audits combined with surveillance visits |
September 2027 | Year 1 of transition window. Most early-adopter clients complete transition. |
September 2028 | Year 2. Pace of transitions accelerates as deadline approaches. |
September 2029 | Anticipated transition deadline (Stage 95 Withdrawn for ISO 9001:2015) After this date, ISO 9001:2015 certificates expire |
Important: The timeline above assumes Stage 60 publication in September 2026. ISO publication dates can shift. Guardian will issue formal transition timeline upon Stage 60 publication.
Once ISO 9001:2026 is published, the following organisations must plan their transition:
Once ISO 9001:2026 is published (anticipated September 2026), new applicants face a choice between certifying to 2015 or 2026 edition. Guardian’s recommendation by scenario:
Scenario | Recommended Edition |
New applicant, audit-ready Q4 2026 or later | ISO 9001:2026 — certify directly to new edition. Avoid 2-step certification. |
New applicant, audit-ready before Q4 2026 | ISO 9001:2015 with planned transition — certify now, plan transition during first surveillance. |
Tender-driven certification urgency | ISO 9001:2015 immediately — both editions valid throughout transition window. Tenders cannot wait. |
Long-term strategic certification (12+ months runway) | ISO 9001:2026 — implementation aligned to new edition from start. |
Re-certification of expired certificate | ISO 9001:2026 if available, ISO 9001:2015 otherwise. Avoid 2015 if 2026 available. |
Once ISO 9001:2026 is published, Guardian will offer three transition audit options:
Best for: Existing clients with annual surveillance audit scheduled during transition window.
Best for: Existing clients whose 3-year recertification audit falls during transition window.
Best for: Clients requiring transition urgency outside surveillance/recertification timing.
Guardian will publish detailed transition audit pricing upon Stage 60 publication. Existing clients will receive direct communication with their personalised transition plan and recommended audit option.
Guardian recommends the following 6-phase implementation plan for transitioning to ISO 9001:2026:
Anticipated cost and effort impact of transition (subject to confirmation upon Stage 60 publication):
Cost / Effort Element | Anticipated Impact |
Audit time | Combined transition + surveillance: +0.5-1 day on top of surveillance · Standalone transition audit: ~50-70% of original Stage 2 duration |
Audit fee | Combined option: minor premium over standard surveillance · Standalone option: full audit fee per IAF MD 5 |
Internal preparation effort | Typically 80-150 person-hours for SME · 200-400 person-hours for medium organisations · Higher for organisations using AI in QMS |
Documentation revisions | Quality Manual update · Risk register expansion · Possible new procedures (AI governance, supply chain resilience) |
Training | Top management briefing · Internal auditor refresh · Staff awareness on new requirements |
Consultancy (if used) | Optional · Many organisations transition successfully without external consultancy · Note: consultancy and certification must be from separate firms (impartiality) |
Indicative pricing range for transition audit only: QAR 2,000 – 6,000 depending on organization size and audit option chosen. Combined audits (transition + surveillance) are most cost-effective. Final pricing per IAF MD 5 calculation upon Stage 60 publication.
Based on Guardian’s experience with previous ISO transitions (9001:2008→2015, 27001:2013→2022, 14001:2015→2026), here are the most common pitfalls — and how to avoid them:
Risk: Certification body capacity becomes constrained near deadline. Audit slots become scarce, prices may increase, and any audit issues leave no time for correction.
Mitigation: Begin transition planning 12-18 months before deadline. Aim for transition audit completed at least 6 months before deadline.
Risk: Updating procedures without changing actual practice. Auditors detect the gap immediately.
Mitigation: Implement new requirements operationally before audit. Generate genuine evidence of new practice for at least 3 months before transition audit.
Risk: Anticipated 2026 changes around organisational culture and ethics may catch organisations off-guard who have historically focused on process documentation.
Mitigation: Engage HR and leadership development functions in transition project. Document cultural commitments and ethical conduct expectations explicitly.
Risk: Many organisations now use AI tools (chatbots, predictive maintenance, quality monitoring AI) without explicit governance. Anticipated 2026 requirements may require this.
Mitigation: Inventory AI/digital tools used within QMS scope. Establish governance documentation including: validation, monitoring, control of changes, accountability.
Risk: Organisations holding ISO 9001 + 14001 + 45001 IMS may face transitions at different times (ISO 14001:2026 already published; ISO 9001:2026 anticipated; ISO 45001:2027 in pipeline). Trying to combine all transitions may overload internal capacity.
Mitigation: Sequence transitions per ISO publication dates. Guardian can support phased transition strategy.
Guardian Middle East LLC offers comprehensive transition support for ISO 9001:2015 → ISO 9001:2026 across the full transition lifecycle:
For clients holding integrated certifications (ISO 9001 + 14001, ISO 9001 + 14001 + 45001), Guardian offers integrated transition planning that sequences ISO 14001:2026 transition (already required), ISO 9001:2026 transition (anticipated), and ISO 45001:2027 transition (anticipated) into a coordinated programme — minimising audit days and total transition cost.
Guardian Middle East LLC
QFC Licence 03870 · Doha, Qatar
Or submit an enquiry: → Contact
Anticipated September 2026, based on ISO/DIS 9001 publication in August 2025 (Stage 40) and typical ISO timeline. ISO publication dates can shift — Guardian will confirm actual publication date upon Stage 60.
The 3-year transition window from publication is standard ISO practice. Assuming September 2026 publication, ISO 9001:2015 certificates would expire approximately September 2029. Your individual certificate may expire earlier if your normal 3-year cycle ends before this date.
Begin awareness and stakeholder briefing now. Hold off on documentation changes until ISO/FDIS 9001 (Stage 50) is published or, ideally, the final standard. The DIS may differ from final text — making changes against DIS risks rework.
No. Accredited transition audits cannot be conducted before the standard is published (Stage 60). Guardian can provide pre-publication readiness assessments and gap analyses, but formal transition audits begin after Stage 60.
ISO publication dates do shift. If publication slips, the transition window also slips correspondingly. Guardian will issue formal communication upon Stage 60 confirming exact dates. Until then, treat dates as 'anticipated approximately'.
Guardian's auditor allocation policy provides continuity where possible. Most clients see the same lead auditor across surveillance and recertification cycles. Auditors are required to complete ISO 9001:2026 transition training before conducting transition audits.
Generally no. Scope statements are independent of standard edition. However, if your organization has changed scope organically since initial certification (new sites, new products), the transition audit is a natural opportunity to update scope formally.
Yes, where standards are integrated. ISO 14001:2026 is already published; ISO 9001:2026 is anticipated. Clients with IMS (Integrated Management Systems) can combine ISO 14001 transition + ISO 9001 transition + surveillance into a single audit visit, achieving 30-40% audit time savings versus separate audits.
IAF (International Accreditation Forum) and ILAC (International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation) merged into Global Accreditation Cooperation Inc. (GAC Inc.) effective 01 January 2026. The IAF MLA + ILAC MRA recognition arrangements transitioned to GAC MRA. Existing accreditations remain valid during a 3-year transition period. UAF/IAS are aligning with GAC Inc. Guardian's accreditation status remains fully valid throughout this transition.
During the transition window, Qatar government bodies (Ashghal, QatarEnergy, Kahramaa, ministries) will accept both editions. Guardian recommends monitoring tender language updates — some bodies may update tender language to reference 2026 edition once published. Guardian will issue advisory once Qatar government practice becomes clear.
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