AS9100 Rev D certification costs, audit fees, implementation expenses, and how to budget for aerospace quality compliance
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The Number That Stops Most Aerospace Suppliers Cold
You need AS9100 certification. Your prime contractor has made that clear. The question isn’t whether you’ll pursue it — it’s whether you can survive the budget shock when you start getting quotes.
Most shops walk into this process expecting a number and walk out with a range so wide it feels useless. That’s not an accident. AS9100 certification costs depend on a half-dozen variables that the certification bodies won’t resolve until they’ve assessed your operation in detail.
Here’s what I can tell you: the cost is real, the range is legitimate, and if you understand the components, you can budget accurately and avoid the expensive surprises that derail timelines.
This guide breaks down every cost element — from the standard itself to the Stage 2 certification audit — and gives you realistic numbers for 2026.

Before you start collecting quotes, know where your gaps are. Most organizations underestimate implementation time because they skip the gap assessment. Run ours first — it’s clause-by-clause, it’s free, and it will tell you exactly where you’re exposed before you commit to a timeline.
In This Guide
- What drives AS9100 certification costs
- The cost of the AS9100 standard itself
- Implementation and consulting costs
- Training costs
- Certification body (registrar) audit fees
- Ongoing surveillance and recertification costs
- Total cost estimates by company size
- How to reduce your certification spend without cutting corners
- FAQ
Table of Contents
👉 Start Here — Top Resources for AS9100 Certification
Before diving into the numbers, these are the resources readers at this stage actually use:
- Buy the AS9100 Rev D Standard — ANSI Webstore — Use code CC2026 for 5% off. The official SAE standard you need before you can begin implementation.
- AS9100 Training Courses — BSI Group — Lead auditor, internal auditor, and implementation training from one of the most recognized names in aerospace certification.
What Drives AS9100 Certification Costs
AS9100 certification costs are not fixed. Every quote you receive will be shaped by these variables:
| Cost Driver | Low-Cost Scenario | High-Cost Scenario |
|---|---|---|
| Company size | Under 50 employees | 500+ employees |
| Number of sites | Single facility | Multiple locations |
| Existing QMS | ISO 9001 already certified | No QMS in place |
| Process complexity | Simple machining or assembly | Design authority, software, multi-discipline |
| Consultant involvement | Internal resources only | Full consultant engagement |
| Certification body choice | Regional, competitive pricing | Tier 1 global registrar |
| Timeline pressure | 18–24 months | 6–9 months (expedited) |
The aerospace and defense sectors carry stricter safety and quality requirements than general industry. That rigor gets reflected in audit time. AS9100 audits run longer than ISO 9001 audits for the same organization size — plan for it.
Cost of the AS9100 Standard
You cannot implement a standard you haven’t read. The official AS9100 Rev D document is the starting point for everything that follows.
AS9100 Rev D is maintained by SAE International and the International Aerospace Quality Group (IAQG). It is available through the ANSI Webstore alongside related aerospace standards.
Current pricing (2026):
- AS9100 Rev D standard: approximately $170–$220 (PDF or print)
- AS9100 standards collection package: available with multi-standard savings
Purchase AS9100 Rev D — ANSI Webstore → Use code CC2026 for 5% off through December 31, 2026.
You will also want access to related documents during implementation:
- AS9104/1 — requirements for aviation, space, and defense quality management system certification programs (your registrar follows this)
- AS9101 — quality management systems audit requirements for aviation, space, and defense organizations
- ISO 9001:2015 — AS9100 incorporates ISO 9001 in full; you need both if your team doesn’t already know the base standard
If you are already ISO 9001 certified, your team knows the foundation. The incremental cost is the delta — roughly 25% of AS9100’s requirements go beyond ISO 9001.
Implementation and Consulting Costs
This is where the range gets wide. Implementation costs depend almost entirely on where you’re starting from.
Starting from scratch (no QMS)
If your shop has no documented quality management system, expect 12–24 months of internal effort and significant documentation work. A consultant will accelerate this but adds direct cost.
Typical consulting fee structures:
| Engagement Type | Typical Cost | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Full implementation consulting | $15,000–$60,000+ | Gap assessment through Stage 2 audit support |
| Project-based (documentation only) | $5,000–$15,000 | QMS manual, procedures, work instructions |
| Hourly advisory | $150–$350/hour | Targeted support for specific gaps or audit prep |
| Pre-assessment (gap audit only) | $2,000–$5,000 | Structured gap report against AS9100 requirements |

Starting from ISO 9001
This is the most common scenario for mid-size manufacturers moving into aerospace supply chains. Your QMS foundation is intact. The work is additive — closing the gap on AS9100-specific requirements including:
- Risk management (beyond ISO 9001 Clause 6 — more prescriptive in aerospace)
- Configuration management
- First article inspection (FAI) requirements per AS9102
- Key characteristics identification and control
- Product/process change control
- Counterfeit parts prevention
Budget $8,000–$25,000 in consulting if you need external support for the transition. Internal teams with a qualified QMS lead can do much of this work without outside help.
If you are building your QMS documentation from scratch, documentation kits can cut your build time significantly. 9001Simplified’s documentation packages cover ISO 9001 foundations that map directly into AS9100 implementation — the same clause structure, the same documented information requirements, ready to adapt for aerospace-specific additions.
Training Costs
AS9100 certification requires trained internal auditors. It also requires that your quality team understands the standard at a level that holds up under registrar scrutiny. Training is not optional — it’s both a certification requirement and a practical necessity.
Training cost ranges (2026):
| Training Type | Format | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| AS9100 Awareness (overview) | Online, self-paced | $200–$600/person |
| AS9100 Internal Auditor | Classroom or virtual, 3 days | $1,200–$2,500/person |
| AS9100 Lead Auditor (Probitas-certified) | Classroom or virtual, 5 days | $1,800–$2,500/person |
| Implementation workshop | On-site, 2 days | $3,000–$8,000 (group) |
Most organizations certify 1–2 internal auditors and send 1–2 quality personnel through awareness training. Budget $3,000–$8,000 for a small to mid-size shop’s initial training investment.
AS9100 Training Courses — BSI Group →
BSI Group offers AS9100 lead auditor, internal auditor, and implementation training with both virtual and classroom options. Their aerospace quality training is recognized across the IAQG community.
Certification Body (Registrar) Audit Fees
The registrar audit is the largest single external expense. This is what you pay the certification body to perform Stage 1 (document review), Stage 2 (on-site certification audit), and issue the AS9100 certificate.
How registrars determine your audit time:
AS9100 audit time is calculated using IAQG and IAF guidelines — typically based on employee count, process complexity, number of shifts, and scope of operations. Aerospace audits are more labor-intensive than general industry audits of equivalent size.
Auditor day rates (2026):
Auditor fees typically run $1,500–$3,000 per audit day, plus travel and accommodation where on-site presence is required. Virtual audit options can reduce travel costs but are not available for all certification bodies or scopes.
Initial certification audit duration by company size:
| Company Size | Typical Audit Days | Estimated Audit Fee Range |
|---|---|---|
| Under 25 employees | 2–3 days | $3,000–$9,000 |
| 25–100 employees | 3–5 days | $4,500–$15,000 |
| 100–250 employees | 5–8 days | $7,500–$24,000 |
| 250–500 employees | 7–12 days | $10,500–$36,000 |
| 500+ employees | 10+ days | $15,000–$60,000+ |
Registration fees, application fees, and certificate issuance fees are additional — typically $500–$2,000 depending on the certification body.
OASIS database registration is mandatory. Your certification body will register your AS9100 certificate in the IAQG OASIS database — this is how prime contractors verify supplier certification status. Confirm your registrar is OASIS-registered before engaging.
Most organizations that fail their Stage 2 audit don’t fail because they misunderstood the standard. They fail because they assumed their documented system matched what was actually happening on the floor. Before you schedule your audit, run a structured internal audit against every AS9100 clause. Your gap assessment checklist will tell you where you’re exposed.
Ongoing Costs After Certification

AS9100 certification is a three-year cycle with annual surveillance audits. Budget for the full cycle, not just the initial certification.
Ongoing cost structure:
| Activity | Frequency | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Annual surveillance audit | Years 1 and 2 | $2,000–$8,000/year |
| Recertification audit | Year 3 | $4,000–$15,000 |
| Internal audit program | Ongoing | Internal labor cost |
| Management review | Annual minimum | Internal labor cost |
| Continual improvement activities | Ongoing | Variable |
Three-year total external cost (registrar fees only):
- Initial certification: $5,000–$36,000
- Year 1 surveillance: $2,000–$8,000
- Year 2 surveillance: $2,000–$8,000
- Year 3 recertification: $4,000–$15,000
- Three-year total (registrar fees): $13,000–$67,000
This is external cost only. Internal labor — quality manager time, audit preparation, document maintenance, management review — adds significantly to the true cost of maintaining certification.
Total AS9100 Certification Cost by Company Size

These figures represent all-in estimates for the first year of certification, including the standard, implementation, training, and audit fees. Consulting costs assume partial external engagement.
| Company Size | Standard + Training | Implementation | Audit Fees | Total Year 1 Estimate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small (under 25 employees) | $2,000–$4,000 | $3,000–$10,000 | $4,000–$10,000 | $9,000–$24,000 |
| Mid-size (25–100 employees) | $3,000–$6,000 | $8,000–$25,000 | $6,000–$18,000 | $17,000–$49,000 |
| Large (100–250 employees) | $4,000–$8,000 | $15,000–$40,000 | $10,000–$28,000 | $29,000–$76,000 |
| Enterprise (250+ employees) | $7,000–$10,000 | $25,000–$80,000+ | $20,000–$60,000+ | $52,000–$150,000+ |
These ranges align with industry data showing SMEs spending $8,000–$30,000 for initial certification (audit fees alone) and total first-year costs of $10,000–$50,000 for organizations with some QMS foundation already in place.
If you are already ISO 9001 certified, reduce the implementation estimate by 30–50%. Your documentation foundation, internal audit program, and management system structure already exist. You are closing gaps, not building from scratch.
How to Reduce Your AS9100 Certification Costs
Cost reduction in AS9100 certification comes from three levers: preparation quality, consultant leverage, and timeline management.
Lever 1 — Do the gap assessment before anything else
A structured gap assessment identifies your actual compliance posture before you engage a consultant or registrar. Organizations that skip this step pay consultants to discover what they could have identified themselves. The AS9100 Rev D Gap Assessment Checklist is built for exactly this purpose.
Lever 2 — Build internal competency before engaging consultants
Train your internal quality lead before you bring in external help. One person with a solid understanding of AS9100 Rev D requirements will cut your consulting hours significantly. The pre-certification investment in AS9100 internal auditor training pays for itself on the first consultant engagement.
Lever 3 — Don’t rush the timeline
Compressed timelines require more consultant hours, more registrar pre-assessment support, and more internal overtime. An 18–24 month implementation done at a sustainable pace typically costs 20–35% less than a 9–12 month expedited push. If your customer isn’t pressing a specific date, don’t create artificial urgency.
Lever 4 — Get multiple registrar quotes
Audit fees vary significantly between certification bodies. Get quotes from at least three accredited registrars before committing. Verify OASIS registration status through the IAF and confirm aerospace-specific auditor qualifications before selecting on price alone.
Lever 5 — Use documentation frameworks
Documentation build time is one of the largest internal cost drivers for organizations starting from scratch. Pre-built QMS documentation frameworks — procedure templates, quality manual structures, record templates — cut initial build time by 40–60% compared to building from blank documents.
9001Simplified’s documentation kits provide the ISO 9001 foundation layer that maps directly into AS9100 implementation. If you need the quality management system built before you can tackle aerospace-specific additions, this is the fastest starting point available.
📥 Free Resources
- AS9100 Rev D Gap Assessment Checklist — Clause-by-clause, free download
- ISO 9001 Roadmap — Foundation standard reference
- Manufacturing Compliance Checklist
- Supplier Quality Checklist
Not Sure What to Do Next?
🔹 If you need to purchase the AS9100 Rev D standard — Buy it through the ANSI Webstore using code CC2026 for 5% off. That is the official SAE/IAQG document — there is no substitute.
🔹 If your team needs AS9100 training — BSI Group’s AS9100 training catalog covers internal auditor, lead auditor, and implementation training in virtual and classroom formats.
🔹 If you need to build your QMS documentation — 9001Simplified’s documentation packages give you the ISO 9001 foundation layer that AS9100 builds on.
The Standards Navigator covers every step of the AS9100 certification journey. Start with the gap assessment, understand what you’re building, and make every dollar in your certification budget count.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does AS9100 certification cost for a small company?
A small company with under 25 employees can expect total first-year AS9100 costs of $9,000–$24,000, assuming some QMS foundation exists. This includes the standard, basic training, limited consulting, and the certification audit. Companies with no existing quality management system should budget toward the higher end or beyond, particularly if a full-service consultant is needed.
Is AS9100 more expensive than ISO 9001 to certify?
Yes, typically 20–40% more for the initial certification audit alone. The audit takes longer because AS9100 has additional requirements beyond ISO 9001 — risk management, configuration management, first article inspection, and more — that require specific auditor competency and additional audit time. If you are already ISO 9001 certified, the premium is lower because your foundation is in place.
How long does AS9100 certification take?
Most organizations complete initial AS9100 certification in 12–24 months. Organizations already certified to ISO 9001 with a competent internal quality function can target the lower end of that range. Compressed timelines of 6–12 months are possible but increase cost and risk of audit failure.
How long does AS9100 certification take?
Most organizations complete initial AS9100 certification in 12–24 months. Organizations already certified to ISO 9001 with a competent internal quality function can target the lower end of that range. Compressed timelines of 6–12 months are possible but increase cost and risk of audit failure.
Do I need a consultant to get AS9100 certified?
No, but it depends on your internal capability. Organizations with an experienced quality manager who understands AS9100 requirements can implement with minimal external support. The gap assessment, internal auditor training, and documentation frameworks reduce the dependency on consultants significantly. Most small to mid-size shops benefit from targeted consulting support on specific gaps rather than full-service engagement.
What happens if I fail my AS9100 Stage 2 audit?
A Stage 2 audit failure does not end the process. The registrar will issue nonconformances — major or minor. Major nonconformances require a corrective action plan and evidence of resolution before certification is issued, which may require a return visit. This adds cost (additional audit days) and delays your timeline. Prevention is the correct strategy: run structured internal audits against every clause before your Stage 2 date.
How much do annual surveillance audits cost for AS9100?
Annual surveillance audits typically cost $2,000–$8,000 per year depending on company size and registrar. They are shorter than the initial certification audit — usually 1–3 days — but are required in Years 1 and 2 of the three-year certification cycle. Recertification in Year 3 costs similarly to the initial certification audit.
Can I use a virtual audit for AS9100 certification?
Some certification bodies offer hybrid or virtual audit options, which can reduce travel costs meaningfully. However, not all registrars and not all scopes are suitable for fully virtual audits under AS9100 requirements. Confirm with your certification body before assuming virtual is available for your operation.
What is the OASIS database and why does it matter for cost?
The IAQG OASIS database is the official registry where AS9100 certificates are recorded. Prime contractors and customers verify supplier certification through OASIS — not through the certificate document alone. Your certification body is required to register your certificate in OASIS. Registrars that are not OASIS-registered cannot issue valid AS9100 certifications. There is no workaround. Selecting an unaccredited or non-OASIS-registered body wastes your entire investment.
The Standards Navigator provides practical guidance on ISO standards and industrial compliance for manufacturing professionals. For more on the AS9100 certification process, see our complete AS9100 guide and our Buy AS9100 article.
Don’t schedule your AS9100 audit until you know where your gaps are. Most certification delays and re-audit fees trace back to assumptions about compliance that a structured gap check would have caught. Run the AS9100 Rev D Gap Assessment Checklist before you commit to a timeline — it’s clause-by-clause, it’s free, and it takes less time than one conversation with a consultant.
👉 Download the AS9100 Rev D Gap Assessment Checklist →
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