IAF Certification Guide: Why It Matters for Indian Businesses
IAF accreditation is the gold standard for ISO certification. This guide explains what IAF means, why it's critical for Indian businesses bidding on government tenders, and how to ensure your ISO certificate carries the IAF mark.
By ISOCert Global Team • 10 June 2026
What is IAF Accreditation?
IAF stands for International Accreditation Forum. It is a global association of accreditation bodies (like NABCB in India) that certify certification bodies (like TUV, BSI, DNV, SGS) to issue ISO certificates. When a certification body is accredited by an IAF member, its certificates are recognised worldwide through the IAF Multilateral Recognition Arrangement (MLA).
In simple terms: IAF accreditation ensures your ISO certificate is genuine, internationally recognised, and accepted by governments, businesses, and tendering authorities across 80+ countries.
Why IAF Accreditation Matters for Indian Businesses
For Indian businesses, IAF accreditation is not optional — it is essential. Here's why:
- Government tender acceptance: Indian government tenders (CPWD, Indian Railways, defence PSUs, municipal corporations) explicitly require IAF-accredited ISO certificates. Non-IAF certificates are rejected.
- GeM portal registration: Government e-Marketplace (GeM) seller registration requires IAF-accredited certifications.
- International recognition: IAF certificates are accepted in 80+ countries through MLA — essential for exporters.
- Bank & financial institution acceptance: Banks, NBFCs, and financial institutions accept only IAF-accredited certificates for loan and credit evaluations.
- B2B credibility: Large Indian and international corporations accept only IAF-accredited certificates from their suppliers.
IAF vs Non-IAF Certification — Key Differences
| Parameter | IAF-Accredited | Non-IAF |
|---|---|---|
| International Recognition | Recognised in 80+ countries via IAF MLA | Not internationally recognised |
| Govt. Tender Acceptance | Yes (mandatory in India) | No — rejected by Indian govt. |
| Audit Rigor | Follows ISO/IEC 17021 standards | Often superficial audits |
| Cost | 30-50% higher | Cheaper |
| Verifiability | Listed on IAF MLA registry | No central registry |
| Credibility | High — trusted globally | Low — often considered fake |
| Validity | 3 years with annual surveillance | Varies — often no surveillance |
How to Verify IAF Accreditation
To verify if your ISO certificate is IAF-accredited:
- Check the certificate: Look for the accreditation body logo (e.g., NABCB, UKAS, ANAB, DAkkS) on the certificate.
- Verify on accreditation body website: Visit the accreditation body's website (e.g., NABCB India) and search for the certification body name.
- Check IAF MLA status: Visit iaf.nu to confirm the accreditation body is an IAF MLA signatory.
- Ask for accreditation certificate: Request your certification body to provide their accreditation certificate from NABCB or other IAF member.
NABCB — India's IAF Member Body
NABCB (National Accreditation Board for Certification Bodies) is India's IAF member body. It is part of the Quality Council of India (QCI) and is responsible for accrediting certification bodies in India. NABCB-accredited certificates are IAF-recognised and accepted worldwide.
ISOCert Global works exclusively with NABCB-accredited (IAF member) certification bodies to ensure all our clients receive genuine, internationally recognised ISO certificates.
Conclusion
If you are an Indian business seeking ISO certification, always insist on IAF-accredited certification. The slightly higher cost (30-50%) is well worth it — IAF certificates are accepted for government tenders, exports, B2B contracts, and financial transactions. Non-IAF certificates are cheaper but widely rejected and may damage your business credibility.
Contact ISOCert Global for genuine IAF-accredited ISO certification at competitive prices.