Supplier Audit Checklist: Free Templates for Quality & Compliance

Template Library >  Manufacturing Inspections > Supplier Audit Checklist

Supplier audit checklists for quality managers, procurement teams, and auditors. Evaluate vendor QMS compliance, production quality, and regulatory standards with ready-to-use templates. Available in PDF or in-app.

What These Supplier Audit Checklists Cover

A supplier audit checklist is a structured template used to evaluate a vendor’s quality management system, production processes, and regulatory compliance during an on-site or remote audit. These templates help you standardize how you assess suppliers, so every auditor covers the same ground and every vendor is measured against the same criteria.

Our supplier audit checklist templates cover areas including:

  • Quality management systems: ISO 9001 alignment, document control, internal audit processes
  • Production quality: incoming material checks, in-process controls, final inspection
  • Vendor compliance: procurement procedures, sub-tier supplier management, traceability
  • Health, safety, and environment: PPE, hazardous materials, facility compliance

With the GoAudits Supplier Audit App, you can:

  • Eliminate paperwork: conduct efficient digital audits
  • Customize this template or easily create your own
  • Save time with instant reports and assign corrective actions

With the GoAudits Inspection App, you can:

General Factory Information

1. Factory Name:


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2. Factory Address:


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3. Factory Representative (Title):


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4. Production Area / Blocks / Floors:


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5. Number of Staff / Production Workers:


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6. Years in Operation:


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7. Major Types of Produced:


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8. Major Production Facilities:


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Summary Of Major Audit Findings

1. Finding 1


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2. Finding 2


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3. Finding 3


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Conclusion

1. Overall Rating


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Quality Management System And Document Control

1. Has the factory established a quality management system covering applicable elements of the ISO9000 standards?


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2. Is the quality management system certified by third party?


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3. Is the quality functional head of the factory independent of other production functions?


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4. Are quality records available, complete and update?


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5. Are internal audits planned and documented?


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6. Are internal audits conducted to verify compliance and effectiveness of the quality management system? Are corrective actions proposed and implemented?


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7. Does factory management periodically review the quality management systems and set targets for continuous improvement?


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8. Are quality trends reported and analyzed to find out the root cause of major quality problems? Are corrective and prevention actions proposed and implemented?


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9. Has the factory established a document control procedure for quality related manuals, procedures, work instructions, specifications, records, etc.?


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Procurement

1. Is there a dedicated department for procurement of raw materials and other indirect materials used for production?


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2. Is there a complete bill of materials (BOM) or part list available for each item manufactured?


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3. Are approved specifications available for raw materials and components purchased?


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4. Does the raw material or component specification include requirements of applicable safety standards and client’s specific requirements?


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5. Are purchasing staff aware of the safety and client specific requirements in the specifications and able to communicate them effectively to the suppliers?


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6. Does the purchase order or sales contract always include or make reference to the relevant requirements of the approved raw material specifications?


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7. Is there procedure for approving suppliers and tracking of their quality performance? Are supplier evaluation records available and complete?


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8. Is an approved supplier list maintained? Are purchase orders placed on the approved suppliers only?


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Management Of Supplier/Subcontractors

1. Has the factory established procedure and criteria for selection and approval of subcontractors? Is an approved supplier/subcontractor list maintained?


Photo Comment

2. Has the factory communicated with the supplier/subcontractors all product requirements to ensure they understand and are capable of meeting them?


Photo Comment

3. Are supplier/subcontractors provided with update safety and quality specifications, approval samples and other relevant quality information for production?


Photo Comment

4. Where materials and components are consigned for subcontractors, are they inspected or verified for acceptance before delivery? Are inspection and testing records maintained?


Photo Comment

5. Where materials and components are sourced by subcontractors, are inspection and testing reports provided by the supplier/subcontractors for showing conformance to the quality and safety specifications?


Photo Comment

6. Is procedure established for incoming inspection and testing of production lots from supplier/subcontractors? Are inspection and testing records maintained?


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7. Are supplier/subcontractors evaluated regularly for performance and quality? Are evaluation records available and complete?


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Incoming Quality Control

1. Has the factory established incoming inspection procedures to assure all incoming materials conform to approval samples or specifications?


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2. Is there a segregated area with sufficient space, appropriate equipment and environment to perform incoming inspection?


Photo Comment

3. Are inspection criteria clearly defined and available for immediate reference? Do they match with the approved specifications?


Photo Comment

4. Where it is not possible to verify the quality and safety characteristics by inspection, is there procedure for suppliers to provide testing documents for lot acceptance?


Photo Comment

5. Are procedure and criteria established for raw materials and components exempt for incoming inspection check? Can the exemption criteria adequately safeguard the final product safety?


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6. Are incoming QC staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform incoming inspection?


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7. Are inspection records available, complete and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


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8. Are records maintained for incoming raw material lot verification, disposition or return to suppliers?


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9. Are incoming materials come from the approved suppliers only?


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In-Process Quality Control

1. Is there a manufacturing flowchart or production plan for each product?


Photo Comment

2. Are all materials, production operations and check points included?


Photo Comment

3. Are work instructions posted for each operation and approval samples available in the work area for immediate reference by the production workers and QC staff?


Photo Comment

4. Are machine settings and parameters defined and checked regularly by in-process QC? Are check records available?


Photo Comment

5. Are critical manufacturing processes defined with proper operation set-up and quality control measures to ensure output quality?


Photo Comment

6. Does the factory have effective measures in the assembly lines for preventing missing part defects in the finished products?


Photo Comment

7. Does the factory have a procedure for controlling the use of regrind materials in the injection molding process?


Photo Comment

8. Are in-process inspection criteria clearly defined and available for immediate reference by in-process QC? Are they matched with the safety standards and client’s requirements?


Photo Comment

9. Are in-process QC staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform incoming inspection?


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10. Are in-process inspection records available, complete, traceable to the production lot, and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


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Final Quality Control

1. Are inspection procedures established for final inspection?


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2. Do the acceptance criteria match with applicable safety standards and clients’ requirements?


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3. Are approval samples and product specifications available for immediate reference by QC?


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4. Is the sampling plan used for final inspection adequate for assurance of product quality and safety?


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5. Are inspection staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform final inspection?


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6. Are final inspection records available, complete, traceable to production lots, and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


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Control Of Measurement And Test Equipment

1. Has the organization a documented procedure to ensure control, calibration and maintenance of inspection, measuring and test equipment? (This includes gages and test equipment used by operators, inspectors, testers, tool-room, maintenance and labs.)


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2. Are testing and measuring equipment able to meet the precision and tolerances of the intended testing methods?


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3. Are calibration program with schedule setup for regular checking of testing equipment? Are labels showing the calibration status available on each piece of testing equipment?


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4. Are equipment calibrated either in-house with proper calibration procedures or through outside competent bodies? Are calibration reports maintained and traceable to national or international standards?


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5. Are laboratory staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform testing and calibration?


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Control Of Non-Conforming Products

1. Are procedures established for control of non-conforming raw material lots?


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2. Are rejected lots or lots pending for rework, sorting or scrap clearly identified with labels or tags and segregated from other accepted lots?


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3. Are designated areas assigned for holding non-conforming lots and clearly marked?


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4. Is there procedure for releasing non-conforming lots for production or shipment? Are the releasing criteria do not compromise product safety in any way?


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5. Are records for releasing of non-conforming lots for production or shipment maintained and with proper approval?


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6. Is there procedure established for rework and sorting of rejected lots to ensure they are properly re-inspected or verified by testing for acceptance?


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7. Are records available for scrap with quantity matching with the rejected lot?


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8. Is there control to prevent any defect parts or process throw-offs from being mixed or returned to the normal production output?


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Lot Identification And Traceability

1. Are lot numbers or batch codes assigned and clearly marked on raw material, semi-finished, and finished product lots for traceability purpose?


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2. Are production records maintained for identifying all raw materials for each lot?


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Production Facilities And Equipment

1. Does the factory possess production facilities for the major manufacturing processes of the type of toys to produce?


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2. Are machines and equipment in good working conditions and well maintained? Are they capable and properly set up to perform the operation as intended?


Photo Comment

3. Are appropriate tools and fixtures available to perform the operation as intended?


Photo Comment

4. Are production machines and equipment periodically maintained, calibrated and checked for proper running?


Photo Comment

5. Does the factory have a maintenance team with adequate skills and technical knowledge? Are they ready for any emergency repair works at the production areas?


Photo Comment

6. Has the factory established a preventive maintenance program for all major production facilities?


Photo Comment

7. Are machines, equipment or work stations under maintenance properly identified for work stoppage?


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Plant Layout, Housekeeping And Workflow

1. Are manufacturing processes and production lines set up with adequate space, proper layout and workflow as necessary?


Photo Comment

2. Is the work areas clean, tidy and free of excessive dust and odors?


Photo Comment

3. Is there adequate space for aisles, transportation of materials, and storage areas available in the production areas?


Photo Comment

4. Is there adequate lighting and ventilation in production areas? Is temperature and environment control exercised in areas where special process requirements are necessary?


Photo Comment

5. Are designated containers available in the work areas to store defect parts or throw-offs from the workstations or production lines?


Photo Comment

6. Are raw materials, semi-finished goods and packed cartons stored away from walls and off the floor on pallets?


Photo Comment

7. Are designated areas for employees’ eating, drinking or smoking well identified and separated from production areas?


Photo Comment

8. Are drinking cups, eating utensils or other personal belongings stored properly and away from the work areas?


Photo Comment
Material Handling And Storage

1. Are materials warehouses enclosed, clean and tidy?


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2. Are materials stored in appropriate containers with adequate protection from damage or contamination?


Photo Comment

3. Are materials properly marked with identification labels in the storage areas?


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4. Are materials in the warehouse in good conditions without damage, dirt, rust or other defects?


Photo Comment

5. Are hazardous chemicals stored separately in a dangerous goods warehouse with restricted access?


Photo Comment

6. Has shelf-life been established for degradable raw materials such as paints and chemicals? Are expiry dates marked on the containers?


Photo Comment

7. Does the factory adopt First-In-First-Out (FIFO) policy for raw materials consumption?


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8. Are proper inventory records maintained?


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Material Safety Control

1. Supplier should establish appropriate procedures to the control limit of toxic substances to meet LC’s requirement.


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2. The supplier shall define and implement procedures to ensure all materials meet all quality and safety requirements.


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3. Whether the supplier signed the DOC to ensure all materials conform to LC’s requirements.


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4. Has Certificate of Compliance from Supplier for every raw material Batch


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5. Every batch of raw material must have a passing 3rd party test report


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6. Is there a specified area for quarantining incoming?


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7. Every paint batch must have individual batch code


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8. Follow receiving quality control procedures including; inspection, labeling, recording and verifying


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9. Follow batch paint segregation procedures including; identification and labeling


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10. Only passed material allowed in factory production floor


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11. Follow record keeping procedures including traceability and filing for 5 years minimum


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General Factory Information

1. Factory Name:


Photo Comment

2. Factory Address:


Photo Comment

3. Factory Representative (Title):


Photo Comment

4. Production Area / Blocks / Floors:


Photo Comment

5. Number of Staff / Production Workers:


Photo Comment

6. Years in Operation:


Photo Comment

7. Major Types of Produced:


Photo Comment

8. Major Production Facilities:


Photo Comment
Summary Of Major Audit Findings

1. Finding 1


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2. Finding 2


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3. Finding 3


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Conclusion

1. Overall Rating


Photo Comment
Quality Management System And Document Control

1. Has the factory established a quality management system covering applicable elements of the ISO9000 standards?


Photo Comment

2. Is the quality management system certified by third party?


Photo Comment

3. Is the quality functional head of the factory independent of other production functions?


Photo Comment

4. Are quality records available, complete and update?


Photo Comment

5. Are internal audits planned and documented?


Photo Comment

6. Are internal audits conducted to verify compliance and effectiveness of the quality management system? Are corrective actions proposed and implemented?


Photo Comment

7. Does factory management periodically review the quality management systems and set targets for continuous improvement?


Photo Comment

8. Are quality trends reported and analyzed to find out the root cause of major quality problems? Are corrective and prevention actions proposed and implemented?


Photo Comment

9. Has the factory established a document control procedure for quality related manuals, procedures, work instructions, specifications, records, etc.?


Photo Comment
Procurement

1. Is there a dedicated department for procurement of raw materials and other indirect materials used for production?


Photo Comment

2. Is there a complete bill of materials (BOM) or part list available for each item manufactured?


Photo Comment

3. Are approved specifications available for raw materials and components purchased?


Photo Comment

4. Does the raw material or component specification include requirements of applicable safety standards and client’s specific requirements?


Photo Comment

5. Are purchasing staff aware of the safety and client specific requirements in the specifications and able to communicate them effectively to the suppliers?


Photo Comment

6. Does the purchase order or sales contract always include or make reference to the relevant requirements of the approved raw material specifications?


Photo Comment

7. Is there procedure for approving suppliers and tracking of their quality performance? Are supplier evaluation records available and complete?


Photo Comment

8. Is an approved supplier list maintained? Are purchase orders placed on the approved suppliers only?


Photo Comment
Management Of Supplier/Subcontractors

1. Has the factory established procedure and criteria for selection and approval of subcontractors? Is an approved supplier/subcontractor list maintained?


Photo Comment

2. Has the factory communicated with the supplier/subcontractors all product requirements to ensure they understand and are capable of meeting them?


Photo Comment

3. Are supplier/subcontractors provided with update safety and quality specifications, approval samples and other relevant quality information for production?


Photo Comment

4. Where materials and components are consigned for subcontractors, are they inspected or verified for acceptance before delivery? Are inspection and testing records maintained?


Photo Comment

5. Where materials and components are sourced by subcontractors, are inspection and testing reports provided by the supplier/subcontractors for showing conformance to the quality and safety specifications?


Photo Comment

6. Is procedure established for incoming inspection and testing of production lots from supplier/subcontractors? Are inspection and testing records maintained?


Photo Comment

7. Are supplier/subcontractors evaluated regularly for performance and quality? Are evaluation records available and complete?


Photo Comment
Incoming Quality Control

1. Has the factory established incoming inspection procedures to assure all incoming materials conform to approval samples or specifications?


Photo Comment

2. Is there a segregated area with sufficient space, appropriate equipment and environment to perform incoming inspection?


Photo Comment

3. Are inspection criteria clearly defined and available for immediate reference? Do they match with the approved specifications?


Photo Comment

4. Where it is not possible to verify the quality and safety characteristics by inspection, is there procedure for suppliers to provide testing documents for lot acceptance?


Photo Comment

5. Are procedure and criteria established for raw materials and components exempt for incoming inspection check? Can the exemption criteria adequately safeguard the final product safety?


Photo Comment

6. Are incoming QC staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform incoming inspection?


Photo Comment

7. Are inspection records available, complete and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


Photo Comment

8. Are records maintained for incoming raw material lot verification, disposition or return to suppliers?


Photo Comment

9. Are incoming materials come from the approved suppliers only?


Photo Comment
In-Process Quality Control

1. Is there a manufacturing flowchart or production plan for each product?


Photo Comment

2. Are all materials, production operations and check points included?


Photo Comment

3. Are work instructions posted for each operation and approval samples available in the work area for immediate reference by the production workers and QC staff?


Photo Comment

4. Are machine settings and parameters defined and checked regularly by in-process QC? Are check records available?


Photo Comment

5. Are critical manufacturing processes defined with proper operation set-up and quality control measures to ensure output quality?


Photo Comment

6. Does the factory have effective measures in the assembly lines for preventing missing part defects in the finished products?


Photo Comment

7. Does the factory have a procedure for controlling the use of regrind materials in the injection molding process?


Photo Comment

8. Are in-process inspection criteria clearly defined and available for immediate reference by in-process QC? Are they matched with the safety standards and client’s requirements?


Photo Comment

9. Are in-process QC staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform incoming inspection?


Photo Comment

10. Are in-process inspection records available, complete, traceable to the production lot, and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


Photo Comment
Final Quality Control

1. Are inspection procedures established for final inspection?


Photo Comment

2. Do the acceptance criteria match with applicable safety standards and clients’ requirements?


Photo Comment

3. Are approval samples and product specifications available for immediate reference by QC?


Photo Comment

4. Is the sampling plan used for final inspection adequate for assurance of product quality and safety?


Photo Comment

5. Are inspection staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform final inspection?


Photo Comment

6. Are final inspection records available, complete, traceable to production lots, and with conclusion of acceptance or reject?


Photo Comment
Control Of Measurement And Test Equipment

1. Has the organization a documented procedure to ensure control, calibration and maintenance of inspection, measuring and test equipment? (This includes gages and test equipment used by operators, inspectors, testers, tool-room, maintenance and labs.)


Photo Comment

2. Are testing and measuring equipment able to meet the precision and tolerances of the intended testing methods?


Photo Comment

3. Are calibration program with schedule setup for regular checking of testing equipment? Are labels showing the calibration status available on each piece of testing equipment?


Photo Comment

4. Are equipment calibrated either in-house with proper calibration procedures or through outside competent bodies? Are calibration reports maintained and traceable to national or international standards?


Photo Comment

5. Are laboratory staff properly trained and knowledgeable to perform testing and calibration?


Photo Comment
Control Of Non-Conforming Products

1. Are procedures established for control of non-conforming raw material lots?


Photo Comment

2. Are rejected lots or lots pending for rework, sorting or scrap clearly identified with labels or tags and segregated from other accepted lots?


Photo Comment

3. Are designated areas assigned for holding non-conforming lots and clearly marked?


Photo Comment

4. Is there procedure for releasing non-conforming lots for production or shipment? Are the releasing criteria do not compromise product safety in any way?


Photo Comment

5. Are records for releasing of non-conforming lots for production or shipment maintained and with proper approval?


Photo Comment

6. Is there procedure established for rework and sorting of rejected lots to ensure they are properly re-inspected or verified by testing for acceptance?


Photo Comment

7. Are records available for scrap with quantity matching with the rejected lot?


Photo Comment

8. Is there control to prevent any defect parts or process throw-offs from being mixed or returned to the normal production output?


Photo Comment
Lot Identification And Traceability

1. Are lot numbers or batch codes assigned and clearly marked on raw material, semi-finished, and finished product lots for traceability purpose?


Photo Comment

2. Are production records maintained for identifying all raw materials for each lot?


Photo Comment
Production Facilities And Equipment

1. Does the factory possess production facilities for the major manufacturing processes of the type of toys to produce?


Photo Comment

2. Are machines and equipment in good working conditions and well maintained? Are they capable and properly set up to perform the operation as intended?


Photo Comment

3. Are appropriate tools and fixtures available to perform the operation as intended?


Photo Comment

4. Are production machines and equipment periodically maintained, calibrated and checked for proper running?


Photo Comment

5. Does the factory have a maintenance team with adequate skills and technical knowledge? Are they ready for any emergency repair works at the production areas?


Photo Comment

6. Has the factory established a preventive maintenance program for all major production facilities?


Photo Comment

7. Are machines, equipment or work stations under maintenance properly identified for work stoppage?


Photo Comment
Plant Layout, Housekeeping And Workflow

1. Are manufacturing processes and production lines set up with adequate space, proper layout and workflow as necessary?


Photo Comment

2. Is the work areas clean, tidy and free of excessive dust and odors?


Photo Comment

3. Is there adequate space for aisles, transportation of materials, and storage areas available in the production areas?


Photo Comment

4. Is there adequate lighting and ventilation in production areas? Is temperature and environment control exercised in areas where special process requirements are necessary?


Photo Comment

5. Are designated containers available in the work areas to store defect parts or throw-offs from the workstations or production lines?


Photo Comment

6. Are raw materials, semi-finished goods and packed cartons stored away from walls and off the floor on pallets?


Photo Comment

7. Are designated areas for employees’ eating, drinking or smoking well identified and separated from production areas?


Photo Comment

8. Are drinking cups, eating utensils or other personal belongings stored properly and away from the work areas?


Photo Comment
Material Handling And Storage

1. Are materials warehouses enclosed, clean and tidy?


Photo Comment

2. Are materials stored in appropriate containers with adequate protection from damage or contamination?


Photo Comment

3. Are materials properly marked with identification labels in the storage areas?


Photo Comment

4. Are materials in the warehouse in good conditions without damage, dirt, rust or other defects?


Photo Comment

5. Are hazardous chemicals stored separately in a dangerous goods warehouse with restricted access?


Photo Comment

6. Has shelf-life been established for degradable raw materials such as paints and chemicals? Are expiry dates marked on the containers?


Photo Comment

7. Does the factory adopt First-In-First-Out (FIFO) policy for raw materials consumption?


Photo Comment

8. Are proper inventory records maintained?


Photo Comment
Material Safety Control

1. Supplier should establish appropriate procedures to the control limit of toxic substances to meet LC’s requirement.


Photo Comment

2. The supplier shall define and implement procedures to ensure all materials meet all quality and safety requirements.


Photo Comment

3. Whether the supplier signed the DOC to ensure all materials conform to LC’s requirements.


Photo Comment

4. Has Certificate of Compliance from Supplier for every raw material Batch


Photo Comment

5. Every batch of raw material must have a passing 3rd party test report


Photo Comment

6. Is there a specified area for quarantining incoming?


Photo Comment

7. Every paint batch must have individual batch code


Photo Comment

8. Follow receiving quality control procedures including; inspection, labeling, recording and verifying


Photo Comment

9. Follow batch paint segregation procedures including; identification and labeling


Photo Comment

10. Only passed material allowed in factory production floor


Photo Comment

11. Follow record keeping procedures including traceability and filing for 5 years minimum


Photo Comment

Save Time with Digital Inspections

What Is a Supplier Audit Checklist?

A supplier audit checklist is a standardized form that guides auditors through the evaluation of a supplier’s operations, quality systems, and compliance. It turns a subjective walkthrough into a structured, repeatable, and scoreable process.

Demand for these checklists is rising as companies diversify their sourcing. QIMA’s Q1 2026 supply chain barometer reported a 42% year-over-year increase in inspection and audit demand across Southeast Asia alone. More suppliers across more regions means more audits to manage, and that puts a premium on having a reliable, repeatable checklist.

The purpose of a supplier audit checklist is simple: give your team a consistent way to assess every supplier against defined standards. These checklists are a core component of broader supply chain compliance software programs. For a deeper look, see our guide to supplier quality management.

Why Use a Supplier Audit Checklist Template?

Starting from a proven template means your team doesn’t need to build an audit form from scratch for every new supplier or standard. Here’s what a good template gives you:

Consistency across auditors and suppliers. When every auditor follows the same checklist, results are comparable. You can score Supplier A against Supplier B using the same criteria, which is hard to do with informal notes.

Documented evidence for ISO compliance. ISO 9001:2015 Clause 8.4 requires organizations to control externally provided processes, products, and services. A structured checklist creates the paper trail registrars expect during certification reviews.

Faster corrective action follow-up. A structured checklist links findings directly to specific audit areas. When a non-conformance shows up under “incoming material inspection,” the corrective action is targeted, not vague.

👉 Corrective Action WorkflowsAssign audit findings to suppliers with deadlines, track resolution progress, and verify close-out, all within GoAudits.

Reduced audit preparation time. A vendor audit template with pre-built sections means your auditor can focus on reviewing supplier documentation before the visit, not designing the form. For teams auditing dozens of suppliers per year, this adds up. And with a tool like GoAudits, you can compare supplier scores across auditors and sites on a single inspection dashboard to spot patterns over time.

What Should a Vendor Audit Checklist Include?

A good supplier audit checklist covers seven core areas. The exact items vary by industry and standards, but these sections appear in most templates and form the backbone of any supplier audit checklist format.

Quality Management System (QMS) Checks

Start with the supplier’s quality management system. This section verifies whether the supplier has a documented QMS, whether it’s certified, and whether it’s actually being followed.

Key checklist items:

  • Is the QMS certified by a third party (ISO 9001 or equivalent)?
  • Are internal audits planned, conducted, and documented?
  • Does senior management review quality performance and set improvement targets?
  • Are quality records available, complete, and current?

Your checklist should probe beyond “do you have a QMS?” and ask “is it working?” Look for evidence of management reviews, trend analysis on quality data, and corrective actions from previous internal audits.

Procurement and Incoming Material Checks

This section evaluates how the supplier manages its own supply chain. Your product quality depends on what your supplier buys, so weak incoming controls at their end will show up as defects at yours.

Key checklist items:

  • Does the supplier maintain an approved supplier list for raw materials?
  • Are material specifications documented and referenced in purchase orders?
  • Is incoming inspection performed against approved specs, with lot acceptance/rejection records?
  • Do supplier evaluation records exist for sub-tier vendors?

A common gap: the supplier has specs on file but purchasing staff aren’t aware of client-specific requirements. Your checklist should test whether procurement communicates the right requirements to their own vendors.

Production and In-Process Quality Control Items

In-process controls are where defects get caught or missed. This section of the supplier quality audit checklist verifies that production is planned, monitored, and documented at each stage.

Key checklist items:

  • Are manufacturing flowcharts or production plans in place for each product?
  • Are work instructions posted and accessible at each workstation?
  • Are machine settings defined, monitored by QC, and recorded?
  • Do in-process inspections happen at defined checkpoints with documented acceptance criteria?

Pay attention to critical processes specifically. A checklist item asking “are critical processes defined with proper controls?” is more useful than a generic “is production monitored?”

Final Inspection and Testing Criteria

Final inspection is the last gate before product ships. Your checklist needs to verify it’s a real gate, not a formality.

Key checklist items:

  • Are final inspection procedures established with clear acceptance criteria?
  • Does the sampling plan align with applicable safety standards and client requirements?
  • Are QC staff trained and qualified?
  • Are inspection records complete, traceable to production lots, and conclusive (accept or reject)?

A weak sampling plan is one of the most common findings. If the supplier uses AQL levels that are too loose for your product risk, the checklist should flag that.

Equipment Calibration and Maintenance Items

If the measurement tools are off, every quality check built on them is unreliable. This section verifies the supplier’s calibration and maintenance program.

Key checklist items:

  • Is there a documented calibration procedure for all inspection and test equipment?
  • Are calibration labels current on each piece of equipment?
  • Is equipment precision adequate for the tolerances being measured?
  • Are calibration records traceable to national or international standards?

Don’t limit this to the QC lab. Calibration applies to gauges used by operators on the production floor, maintenance teams, and tool rooms. Your checklist should specify this scope.

Document Control and Traceability Requirements

Document control and traceability are required by ISO 9001 and most industry-specific standards. Without them, a product recall becomes impossible to scope.

Key checklist items:

  • Does the supplier have a document control procedure covering manuals, specs, and work instructions?
  • Can products be traced from raw material lot through to finished goods?
  • Is there a procedure for handling non-conforming products (quarantine, disposition, root cause)?

Test whether the system works in practice. Can the supplier demonstrate a mock trace during the audit? Are obsolete documents actually removed from the shop floor? Practical tests reveal more than a policy review.

Health, Safety, and Environmental Compliance Checks

Safety and environmental violations create legal and reputational risk for both the supplier and your organization.

Key checklist items:

  • Are PPE requirements defined and enforced?
  • Are emergency action plans posted and accessible?
  • Does hazardous material handling follow documented procedures?
  • Does the facility meet local environmental and labor regulations?

For industries with specific environmental requirements, extend this section to cover waste management, emissions, and sustainability certifications. Some organizations also add ethical sourcing and labor rights items, especially for suppliers in higher-risk regions.

👉 ISO Audit Checklists: Browse the full GoAudits library of ISO audit checklists covering 9001, 14001, and 45001 standards.

How to Use a Supplier Audit Checklist: 5 Steps

Having a good supplier audit template is only half the job. Here’s how to put it to work.

Step 1: Define the Audit Scope and Objectives

Decide what the checklist needs to cover before you arrive. Are you running a full QMS audit for a new supplier, or a focused re-audit of previous findings? A clear scope keeps the audit efficient and prevents scope creep.

Step 2: Customize the Checklist to Your Requirements

Adapt the template to your industry, standards, and contractual obligations. Whether you start from a vendor audit checklist template or build one from scratch, add scoring criteria that match how you evaluate suppliers:

  • Pass/fail for compliance-critical items
  • Weighted numeric scores for benchmarking
  • N/A for items that don’t apply

A vendor audit questionnaire with irrelevant sections wastes time and undermines auditor credibility.

Step 3: Conduct the Audit On-Site or Remotely

Work through the checklist sections systematically. Record evidence as you go: photos of non-conformances, names of documents reviewed, notes from staff interviews.

Don’t save documentation for later. Capture it in the moment while context is fresh.

Step 4: Score Findings and Classify Non-Conformances

Rate each section and calculate an overall supplier score. Classify findings into three categories:

  • Major non-conformance: requires corrective action before the supplier can be approved or continue shipping
  • Minor non-conformance: needs a fix within a defined timeframe
  • Observation: improvement opportunity, not a failure

Step 5: Generate the Report and Assign Corrective Actions

Share the audit report with the supplier promptly. Include:

  • Scores by section
  • Summary of findings with photo evidence
  • Assigned corrective actions with deadlines

Schedule a follow-up to verify that corrective actions have been implemented and are effective.

👉 Inspection Report Software: GoAudits auto-generates scored audit reports with photos, comments, and e-signatures the moment an audit is finished. Share directly with suppliers.

How to Choose the Right Vendor Audit Template for Your Industry

Different industries and standards call for different checklist structures. Picking the right supplier audit checklist format saves rework and ensures your audit covers what regulators and customers expect.

ISO 9001 audits are the most common starting point. A general supplier audit checklist aligned to Clause 8.4 covers QMS, document control, corrective actions, and management review. For manufacturing companies, the GoAudits ISO 9001 supplier audit checklist for manufacturing adds sections for process control, incoming material, and equipment calibration.

Food and beverage supplier audits add HACCP compliance, sanitation, allergen control, pest management, and product traceability. If you’re auditing food suppliers, our guide to HACCP checklists covers what your checklist needs to include. The GoAudits food supplier audit checklist is built for this purpose.

Manufacturing checklists emphasize production process controls, equipment maintenance, incoming inspection, and in-process quality. If your suppliers make components or raw materials, your checklist needs to go deeper on process capability than a generic template. For more on how to structure these, see our guide to manufacturing audits.

Medical devices and automotive have their own standards. ISO 13485 requires design controls and risk management. IATF 16949 adds layered process audits and PPAP requirements. Start with a general supplier audit checklist and add standard-specific sections.

Choosing the Right Format: PDF, Excel, or App

A supplier audit checklist PDF or vendor audit checklist PDF works for simple, one-off references. Supplier audit checklist Excel files add scoring and basic analysis but require manual handling. A digital audit app combines checklist structure with real-time data capture, automatic scoring, instant reports, and corrective action tracking.

For teams running audits across multiple suppliers, the app format pays for itself in time saved. Browse the full range of templates in the factory audit checklist library, where all templates are available free as PDF or in-app.

How GoAudits Helps With Supplier Audits

GoAudits gives quality and procurement teams a mobile platform to run structured supplier audits across their entire vendor base.

  • Conduct audits on-site or remotely using iOS or Android, even offline in facilities with poor connectivity
  • Customize any supplier audit checklist template to match your standards, or build your own from scratch with the drag-and-drop form builder
  • Auto-generate scored PDF reports with photos, comments, and e-signatures the moment an audit is complete
  • Assign corrective actions to suppliers with deadlines and track resolution through to verified close-out
  • Compare supplier scores and trends across your vendor base with dashboard analytics

FAQs

How often should you run a supplier audit checklist?

Most organizations audit critical suppliers annually and new suppliers before onboarding. High-risk or underperforming vendors may need quarterly reviews. ISO 9001 expects a risk-based approach, so frequency should reflect past performance and criticality of supply.

What is the difference between a supplier audit checklist and a vendor assessment checklist?

A supplier audit checklist focuses on on-site evaluation of processes, quality systems, and compliance. A vendor assessment checklist is broader, often covering financial stability, delivery performance, and commercial factors. Many organizations use both: a vendor assessment for screening, then a supplier audit checklist for detailed evaluation.

Can you use a supplier audit checklist for remote or desktop audits?

Yes. Remote audits use the same checklist structure but rely on document reviews, video calls, and supplier self-assessments instead of physical walkthroughs. Digital checklist tools make this easier because suppliers can upload evidence directly into the form.

What format works best for a supplier audit checklist: PDF, Excel, or app?

A supplier audit checklist PDF works for one-off references. Supplier audit checklist Excel adds scoring but requires manual handling. A mobile audit app combines checklist structure with real-time data capture, automatic scoring, and corrective action tracking, making it the strongest option for teams auditing multiple suppliers. GoAudits offers a 14-day free trial so you can test the difference before committing.

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