What Is AQL?
Acceptable Quality Level (AQL) is a statistical measurement system defined by the international standard ISO 2859-1 that determines the maximum number of defective units considered acceptable in a random sample drawn from a production batch. AQL is the global standard for quality inspection in manufacturing and is used by virtually every professional inspection company operating in China.
How AQL Sampling Works
Rather than inspecting every single unit in an order — which would be prohibitively expensive and time-consuming — AQL uses statistical sampling. The inspector draws a random sample of a specific size from the total order quantity, inspects each unit in the sample against your quality criteria, counts the number of defective units found, and compares the defect count against the accept/reject thresholds defined by the AQL table.
Determining Sample Size
Sample size is determined by the total lot size and the inspection level. General Inspection Level II is the standard level used in most commercial inspections. For an order of 3,200 units at Level II, the sample size would be 125 units. For 10,000 units, the sample size would be 200 units. The sample size increases with lot size but at a decreasing rate — you do not need to inspect a proportionally larger sample for bigger orders.
Defect Classifications
AQL inspection classifies defects into three categories, each with its own tolerance level:
Critical Defects (AQL 0)
Defects that pose a safety hazard to the user or violate mandatory regulations. Examples include sharp edges on children's toys, electrical products that could cause shock, or products containing banned substances. The standard AQL for critical defects is 0, meaning zero tolerance — any critical defect in the sample results in a failed inspection.
Major Defects (AQL 1.0 or 2.5)
Defects that affect the product's functionality or significantly impact its appearance, making it unsellable or likely to generate customer complaints. Examples include a zipper that does not close properly, a significant color mismatch from the approved sample, or an electronic product that does not power on. The most common AQL for major defects is 2.5, though more demanding buyers use AQL 1.0.
Minor Defects (AQL 2.5 or 4.0)
Small cosmetic imperfections that do not affect functionality and are unlikely to cause customer complaints. Examples include a tiny scratch visible only under close inspection, a slight variation in thread color, or minor packaging imperfections. The standard AQL for minor defects is 4.0, with 2.5 used for premium products.
Reading the AQL Table
The AQL table provides accept and reject numbers for each combination of sample size and AQL level. For example, with a sample size of 125 units and AQL 2.5, the accept number is 7 and the reject number is 8. This means if 7 or fewer defective units are found, the lot passes. If 8 or more defective units are found, the lot fails.
Choosing the Right AQL Levels
The appropriate AQL levels depend on your product category, target market, and brand positioning:
- Premium brands: Critical 0 / Major 1.0 / Minor 2.5
- Standard consumer products: Critical 0 / Major 2.5 / Minor 4.0
- Budget products: Critical 0 / Major 4.0 / Minor 6.5
Communicate your AQL levels to both the factory and your inspection company before production begins. This sets clear expectations for what quality level is required.
Common Mistakes with AQL
- Confusing AQL with defect percentage: AQL 2.5 does not mean you accept 2.5% defects. It is a statistical probability framework, not a defect rate.
- Using AQL as the only quality measure: AQL sampling can miss concentrated defect clusters. Combine AQL inspections with process monitoring and golden sample comparisons.
- Setting unrealistically tight AQL levels: Using AQL 0.1 for minor cosmetic defects will result in nearly every inspection failing, causing delays and frustration.
- Not defining defect classifications clearly: Without a detailed defect classification list, different inspectors will categorize the same issue differently.
Beyond AQL: Complementary Quality Measures
While AQL is the standard framework, supplement it with functional testing of key features on every sampled unit, comparative evaluation against the approved golden sample, on-site production monitoring during manufacturing, and specific test requirements for your product category such as drop tests, weight capacity tests, or waterproofing tests.