FDA 3613a Supplementary Information Certificate of Exportability R

Export Certificates for FDA Regulated Products under U.S.C. Sections 801(e) and 802

FDA-3613a

CDRH Export Certificate (FDA 3613, 3613a, 3613c)

OMB: 0910-0498

Document [pdf]
Download: pdf | pdf
Form Approved: OMB No. 0910-0498; Expiration Date: 10/31/2010

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY REQUESTS

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration
1. Requestor Information
Name

Address

Firm

Telephone number

FAX number

Firm Tax ID code

Email address

2. Manufacturer Information
Firm

Address (P.O. Box not acceptable)

Registration number

Date of last FDA inspection

3. Product Information
Product name

Does the product have an approved IDE?
Yes

Product class

No

If yes, provide IDE number:
Class 1

Class 2

Class 3

4. List country(ies) for which the Certificates are requested.

5. Indicate what product information should appear on the certificate.

6. Should the country destination be listed on the certificate? (Note: CDRH does not list a specific country on a certificate.)
Yes

No

Indicate the total number of certificates requested:

7. Are you exporting pursuant to section 801(e) or section 802 of the Act?
To section 801(e)

To section 802

NOTE: To meet the requirements for exporting products pursuant to section 802 of the Act, an exporter must maintain records of the
product(s) exported and the countries to which they were exported. Notification of exporting unapproved drugs or devices, including
biologics, pursuant to section 802(g) of the Act is separate from requesting or receiving a Certificate of Exportability. Notification to
FDA is required when the exporter first begins to export and should be sent to the same address for requesting export certificates.
CBER instructions are on page 5.

CDRH instructions for 802 are on page 7.

CDRH instructions for 801(e)(1) are on page 6.

CVM instructions are on page 8.

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 1 of 8

PSC Graphics: (301) 443-1090

EF

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

EXPORTER’S CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
“CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY”
for CBER and CVM

FIRM NAME

As the responsible official or designee of the company named above, I hereby certify to the United States Food and
Drug Administration that:
• the product(s) accords to the specifications of the foreign purchaser;
• the product(s) is not in conflict with the laws of the country to which it is intended for export;
• the shipping package for the product(s) is labeled on the outside that it is intended for export; and
• the product(s) is not sold or offered for sale in the United States
(Check below, if exporting under Section 802 of the Act.)
In addition, I hereby certify to the FDA that pursuant to Section 802(f)(1) of the Act, the product(s) being
exported has been manufactured, processed, packaged, and held in substantial conformity with current good
manufacturing practice requirements.
SIGNATURE

DATE

NAME AND TITLE

Making or submitting false statements on any documents submitted to FDA may constitute violations of the
United States Code Title 18, Chapter 47, Section 1001 with penalties including up to $250,000 in fines and up to
5 years imprisonment.

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 2 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

EXPORTER’S CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
“CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY”
for CDRH [Section 801(e)(1)]

NAME OF FACILITY

As a responsible official or designee authorized to represent and act on behalf of the requesting facility named
immediately above, I hereby certify to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that the facility(s) and the products
identified on the Supplemental Information are to the best of my knowledge in compliance with the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (the Act) and all applicable or pertinent regulations including the following:
1. Each product(s) identified for export accords to the specification of the foreign purchaser; 801(e)(1)(A);
2. Each product(s) identified are not in conflict with the laws of the country to which it is intended for export;
801(e)(1)(B);
3. The product(s) shipping package for the product(s) is labeled on the outside that it is intended for export;
801(e)(1)(C);
4. The product(s) is not sold or offered for sale in domestic commerce (the United States); 801(e)(1)(D);
5. All contract manufacturers and contract sterilizers involved in the manufacturing process have been identified
on the 3613a form;
6. The manufacturer is currently registered and has listed each of its medical devices identified for export as
required by section 510 of the Act and CFR Part 807;
7. The requesting facility has not listed any HIV products on the certificate;
8. Each product(s) identified on the certificate is a Class I or II product;
9. Each product(s) identified on the certificate is being exported from the United States.
I hereby make this certification of compliance statement to FDA with full knowledge that the making or submission of
false statements represents violations of United States Code Title 18, Chapter 47, Section 1001. Penalties include up to
$250,000 in fines and up to five years imprisonment.
DATE

SIGNATURE

NAME AND TITLE

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 3 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

EXPORTER’S CERTIFICATION STATEMENT
“CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY”
for CDRH (Section 802)

NAME OF FACILITY

As a responsible official or designee authorized to represent
and act on behalf of the requesting facility named immediately
above, I hereby certify to the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) that the facility(s) and the products identified on the
attached application for a Certificate of Exportability Section
802 are to the best of my knowledge in substantial compliance
with Section 802 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(the Act) and all applicable or pertinent regulations including
the following:

8. Each product(s) identified are not in conflict with the
laws of the country to which it is intended for export;
801(e)(1)(B);
9. The product(s) shipping package for the product(s) is
labeled on the outside that is intended for export; 801(e)
(1)(C);
10. The product(s) is not sold or offered for sale in domestic
commerce (the United States); 801(e)(1)(D);

1. The manufacturer is currently registered and has listed
each of its medical devices identified for export as
required by section 510 of the Act and CFR Part 807;

11. The product identified is not an imminent hazard to
health in the United States, as notified by the Secretary;
802(f)(4)(B);

2. All contract manufacturers and contract sterilizers
involved in the manufacturing process have been
identified on the 3613a form;

12. The product(s) identified are labeled in accordance with
the requirements of the Tier 1 Country (country granting
valid marketing authorization under 802(b)), as well as
the requirements of any other country to which the device
would be exported (including language requirements and
units of measure), 802(f)(5);

3. Each product identified for export is manufactured
substantially in accordance with good manufacturing
practices or international quality systems standards
recognized by the Secretary; 802(f)(1);
4. Each product(s) identified is not adulterated by
containing any filth, putrid or decomposed substance in
whole or in part; 501(a)(1);
5. Each product(s) identified is not prepared, packed or
held under insanitary conditions whereby it may be
contaminated with filth or rendered injurious to health;
501(a)(2)(A);
6. Each product(s) container does not contain any
poisonous or deleterious substance which may render the
device injurious to health; 501(a)(3);
7. Each product(s) identified for export accords to the
specification of the foreign purchaser; 801(e)(1)(A);

13. The product identified is promoted in accordance with
labeling requirements of 802(f)(5); 802(f)(6);
14. The requesting facility has not listed any HIV products
on the certificate;
15. Each product(s) identified on the certificate is being
exported from the United States;
16. Each product identified is a Class III device or is a
banned device.
I hereby make this certification of compliance statement to
FDA with full knowledge that the making or submission of
false statements represents violations of United States Code
Title 18, Chapter 47, Section 1001. Penalties include up to
$250,000 in fines and up to five years imprisonment.

SIGNATURE

DATE

NAME AND TITLE

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 4 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

EXPORT CERTIFICATION

Submission Requirements for Requesting Certificates for
Exporting Products to Foreign Countries (for CBER)
Background
Firms exporting products from the U.S. are often asked by foreign
customers or foreign governments to supply a certification relating
to products subject to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
and other acts the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
administers. Under the FDA Export Reform and Enhancement Act
of 1996 (the Act), FDA is authorized to issue certificates for drugs,
animal drugs, and devices within 20 days of receipt of a request for
such a certificate. A fee of up to $175 may be charged for each
certificate issued. In addition to issuing export certificates for
approved or licensed products, the FDA will also issue export
certificates for unapproved products that meet the requirements of
Sections 801(e) or 802 of the Act.

General Instructions:
• The “Certificate to Foreign Government” is for the export of
products legally marketed in the United States. Certificate
requests should include the information listed in Supplementary
Information – Certificate to Foreign Government Requests
(PDF, Text). Please ensure that the Exporter’s Certification
Statement is signed by a responsible official of the exporting firm
and is enclosed with the certificate request. Please ensure that the
appropriate Exporter Certification Statements for Certificate to
Foreign Government Requests for Human Cells, Tissues, and
Cellular and Tissue-Based Products (procured prior to May 25,
2005, or on or after May 25, 2005) is signed by a responsible
official of the exporting firm and is enclosed with the certificate
request.
• The “Certificate of Exportability” is for the export of products
not approved for marketing in the United States (unapproved
products) that meet the requirements of Sections 801(e) or 802 of
the Act. Certificate requests should include the information listed
in Supplementary Information - Certificate of Exportability
Requests (PDF, Text). Please ensure that the Exporter’s
Certification Statement is signed by a responsible official of the
exporting firm and is enclosed with the certificate request.
• The “Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product” conforms to
the format established by the World Health Organization (WHO)
and is intended for use by the importing country when the product
in question is under consideration for a product license that will
authorize its importation and sale or for renewal, extension,
amending or reviewing a license. WHO Certificate requests
should include the information listed in
Supplementary
Information – Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product
Requests (PDF, Text). Please ensure that the Exporter’s
Certification Statement is signed by a responsible official of the
exporting firm and is enclosed with the certificate request.
• The “Non-clinical Research Use Only Certificate is for the
export of a non-clinical research use only product, material, or
FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

component that is not intended for human use which may be
marketed in, and legally exported from the United States under
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Certificate requests
should include the information listed in Supplementary
Information - Non-clinical Research Use Only Certificate
Requests (PDF, Text). Please ensure that the Exporter’s
Certification Statement is signed by a responsible official of the
exporting firm and is enclosed with the certificate request.
• Please type certificate requests or print clearly.
• In most cases, one product will be listed per certificate. However,
products that were approved under the same PLA / BLA, NDA,
PMA or 510(k) application or similar unapproved products may
be listed on the same certificate based on the available space for a
one page certificate. Certificate requests for listing multiple
products will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
• If information is omitted in the application by the requestor or if
clarification is needed on the supplied information, the requestor
will be contacted via telephone or FAX. If the requestor does not
provide the necessary information within 48 hours, the request for
certificates will be returned and will need to be resubmitted for
FDA review.
• Questions may be directed to the Import/Export Team at 301827-6201.
• Send the request and supporting documents to:
Food and Drug Administration
Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research
Office of Compliance and Biologics Quality
Division of Case Management
1401 Rockville Pike, Attention: HFM-624
Rockville, MD 20852-1448
or via FAX at 301-827-9189
• On October 1, 1996, CBER was given the authority to charge
$175 for the first two certificates and $85 for any subsequent
certificates issued for the same product(s) in response to the same
certificate request. Please do not submit a check with your
request, as FDA will bill you quarterly for issued certificates.
• You may enclose a completed FEDEX form to expedite the return
of Certificates.
Issuance of a “Certificate to Foreign Government”, “Certificate
of Exportability” or “Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product”
will not preclude regulatory action by FDA, if warranted,
against products covered by the Certificate.
A “Certificate to Foreign Government”, “Certificate of
Exportability” or “Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product” is
issued by FDA solely for export purposes and may not be used
for domestic advertising.

Page 5 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

INSTRUCTIONS FOR REQUESTS FOR
CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY [Section 801(e)(1)]
(for CDRH)
1. The Certificate of Exportability Section 801(e)(1) is for the
export of products not approved for marketing in the United
States that meet the requirements of Section 801(e)(1) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Among the requirements to be met prior to the issuance of this certificate are the
following:
a. The manufacturing facility must be in compliance with the
registration requirements;
b. The device must be in compliance with the listing requirements;
c. The device must meet the requirements of Section 801(e):
(A) accords to the specifications of the foreign purchaser,
(B) is not in conflict with the laws of the country to which it
is intended for export,
(C) is labeled on the outside of the shipping package that it is
intended for export, and
(D) is not sold or offered for sale in domestic commerce.
In addition, the U.S. Exporter must comply with the laws of the
importing country.

10. If more than 3 products are to be included on the certificate,
this will necessitate the creation of additional pages. The
requestor will need to provide BOTH a paper and electronic
version of this information. Please note that all firms appearing
on the actual certificate must also appear on these additional
pages. If you have questions about how to format these pages,
please send an email to: [email protected]
11. If information is omitted in the application by the requestor or
if clarification is needed, the requestor will be contacted via
email or phone. If the requestor does not supply the necessary
information within 48 hours, the request for certificates will be
returned and will need to be resubmitted for FDA review.
12. Mark on the envelope "Request for Certificates of Exportability". Please include a completed return Fedex Air bill to
expedite the return of the certificates. Send the form along with
certificate request to:
Food and Drug Administration
CDRH - Office of Compliance
Export Certificates
10903 New Hampshire Avenue
Building 66, Room 2621
Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002

2. Please ensure that the Exporter's Certification Statement is
signed by a responsible official of the exporting firm.
3. All products listed on a Certificate of Exportability must be
exported from the U.S.
4. Each Certificate of Exportability request must be submitted by
a U.S. manufacturer only, whose name must appear on the
certificate.
5. Any domestic subsidiary of the manufacturer, whose name
appears on the Certificate of Exportability, must sign an Exporter's
Certification Statement.
6. All contract manufacturers and contract sterilizers involved in
the manufacturing process must be identified on the form
regardless if they are to appear on the certificate.
7. It is the requestor's responsibility to ensure that the information
is supplied correctly, including spelling.

13. CDRH has the authority to charge $175 for the first certificate
and $15 for any subsequent certificate issued at that time, up to
a total of 50 pages (including the certificate and any
attachment pages). For example, if you request a certificate
which is 10 pages in total length you may only request 5
certificates. You will be charged $175 for the first and $15 for
each of the 4 additional certificates. If your request exceeds 50
pages you will incur additional charges.
14. Issuance of a “Certificate of Exportability” will not preclude
regulatory action by FDA, if warranted, against products covered
by the Certificate.

8. Only hardcopy requests can be filled at this time.

15. A “Certificate of Exportability” is issued by FDA solely for
export purposes and may not be used for domestic advertising.

9. Please do not submit a check with your request, as FDA will
bill you quarterly.

16. If you have any questions, please call 301 796-7400 or email
[email protected]

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 6 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

INSTRUCTIONS FOR REQUESTS FOR
CERTIFICATE OF EXPORTABILITY [Section 802]
(for CDRH)
1. The Certificate of Exportability Section 802 is for the export of
products not approved for marketing in the United States that
meet the requirements of Section 801(e)(1) and Section 802 of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Among the
requirements to be met prior to the issuance of this certificate
are the following:
a. The manufacturing facility must be in compliance with the
registration requirements;
b. The device must be in compliance with the listing requirements;
c. The device must meet the requirements of Section 801(e):
(A) accords to the specifications of the foreign purchaser,
(B) is not in conflict with the laws of the country to which it
is intended for export,
(C) is labeled on the outside of the shipping package that it is
intended for export, and
(D) is not sold or offered for sale in domestic commerce.
In addition, the U.S. Exporter must comply with the laws of the
importing country.

10. If more than 3 products are to be included on the certificate,
this will necessitate the creation of additional pages. The
requestor will need to provide BOTH a paper and electronic
version of this information. Please note that all firms appearing
on the actual certificate must also appear on these additional
pages. If you have questions about how to format these pages
please send an email to: [email protected]
11. If information is omitted in the application by the requestor or
if clarification is needed, the requestor will be contacted via
email or phone. If the requestor does not supply the necessary
information within 48 hours, the request for certificates will be
returned and will need to be resubmitted for FDA review.
12. Mark on the envelope "Request for Certificates of Exportability". Please include a completed return Fedex Air bill to
expedite the return of the certificates. Send the form along with
certificate request to:
Food and Drug Administration
CDRH - Office of Compliance
Export Certificates
10903 New Hampshire Avenue
Building 66, Room 2621
Silver Spring, MD 20993-0002

2. Please ensure that the Exporter's Certification Statement is
signed by a responsible official of the exporting firm.
3. All products listed on a Certificate of Exportability must be
exported from the U.S.
4. Each Certificate of Exportability request must be submitted by
a U.S. manufacturer only, whose name must appear on the
certificate.
5. Any domestic subsidiary of the manufacturer, whose name
appears on the Certificate of Exportability, must sign an Exporter's
Certification Statement.
6. All contract manufacturers and contract sterilizers involved in
the manufacturing process must be identified on the form
regardless if they are to appear on the certificate.
7. It is the requestor's responsibility to ensure that the information
is supplied correctly, including spelling.

13. CDRH has the authority to charge $175 for the first certificate
and $15 for any subsequent certificate issued at that time, up to
a total of 50 pages (including the certificate and any
attachment pages). For example, if you request a certificate
which is 10 pages in total length you may only request 5
certificates. You will be charged $175 for the first and $15 for
each of the 4 additional certificates. If your request exceeds 50
pages you will incur additional charges.
14. Issuance of a “Certificate of Exportability” will not preclude
regulatory action by FDA, if warranted, against products covered
by the Certificate.

8. Only hardcopy requests can be filled at this time.

15. A “Certificate of Exportability” is issued by FDA solely for
export purposes and may not be used for domestic advertising.

9. Please do not submit a check with your request, as FDA will
bill you quarterly.

16. If you have any questions, please call 301 796-7400 or email
[email protected]

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

Page 7 of 8

Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration

INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPLETION OF
APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATES
(for CVM)
1. The Export Certificate to Foreign Governments is for the export
of products legally marketed in the United States. An
application form must be completed and signed. The form is to
be completed by the responsible head or designee of the
exporting firm. Please enclose labels for each product.
2. The Certificate of Exportability is for the export of products
unapproved for distribution and sale in the United States. The
requestor must meet the requirements of Section 801(e) of the Act.
3. The “Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product” conforms to
the format established by the World Health Organization (WHO)
and is intended for use by the importing country when the
product in question is under consideration for a product license
that will authorize its importation and sale or for renewal,
extension, amending or reviewing a license. WHO Certificate
requests should include the information listed in Supplementary
Information – Certificate of a Pharmaceutical Product
Requests. Please ensure that the Exporter’s Certification
Statement is signed by a responsible official of the exporting firm
and is enclosed with the certificate request.
4. If the requested information on the application form is not
provided by the exporting firm or if clarification is needed on
the supplied information, the exporting firm will be contacted
via telephone or FAX. If the exporting firm does not provide
the necessary information within 48 hours, the request for
certificates will be returned and will need to be resubmitted.
You may enclose a completed FEDEX form to expedite return
of the Certificates. A certificate will be issued for each product.

5. Requests for certificates should be sent to:
Kim Bell
Center for Veterinary Medicine Division of
Compliance (HFV-235)
7519 Standish Place
Rockville, MD 20855
(240-276-9212- for inquiries)
6. The fee for preparing and issuing a single certificate is $175;
1st duplicate original $155 and $70 for each subsequent
duplicate. No fee will be charged for animal food/feed
products. Please do not include the fee payment with your
requests; the exporting firm will be billed quarterly.
7. The instructions and applications will be available on the CVM
Home Page (www.fda.gov/cvm/exportcertificate.htm).
PLEASE NOTE: Making or submitting false statements on any
documents submitted to FDA represents violations of the
United States Code, Title 18, Chapter 47, Section 1001 with
penalties including up to $10,000 in fines and up to 5 years
imprisonment.
Issuance of an Export Certificate for Approved Products or
Certificate of Exportability will not preclude regulatory action
by FDA, if warranted, against products covered by the
Certificate. Certificates issued by the FDA are solely for export
purposes and may not be used for domestic advertising.

Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
[Applies equally to CBER, CDRH, and CVM portions of this form.]
Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for
reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection
of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to the address below.
Department of Health and Human Services
Food and Drug Administration
Office of Chief Information Officer
1350 Piccard Drive, 420A
Rockville, MD 20850
[Please do NOT return this form to the above address, except as it pertains to comments on the burden estimate.]
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control number.

FORM FDA 3613a (11/09)

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File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleFDA-3613a
SubjectSupplementary Information Certificate of Exportability Requests
AuthorPSC Graphics
File Modified2009-12-02
File Created2009-05-28

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