Computer System Validation Flow Chart: Your Step-by-Step Guide to FDA Compliance 

Getting FDA compliance wrong is expensive. A single audit observation can delay product releases, trigger warning letters, or shut down operations entirely. 

A computer system validation flow chart removes that uncertainty. It gives your quality, IT, and regulatory teams a shared, documented roadmap — from system planning all the way through retirement. 

This guide covers every stage of the CSV process. You will find step-by-step explanations, key documents, qualification checklists, and regulatory requirements — all in one place. 

What Is Computer System Validation? 

Computer System Validation (CSV) is the process of providing documented evidence that a computer-based system consistently does what it is designed to do. 

CSV is a process for ensuring that computer-based systems produce data and information that meets a set of pre-defined requirements. The pharmaceutical industry relies on data integrity to ensure reliable, accurate, and consistent information throughout the product lifecycle.  — PMC, National Institutes of Health 

In short — it is your proof. Proof that your system works. Proof that it works correctly every single time. 

CSV Is Not Optional 

CSV is not merely an industry recommendation — it is a regulatory necessity that bridges the gap between technology and regulatory compliance. 

At RxCloud, our expert Computer System Validation (CSV) services cover the complete lifecycle — from planning and URS through IQ, OQ, PQ, and periodic reviews — fully aligned with FDA 21 CFR Part 11, EU Annex 11, and GAMP 5. 

Who Needs Computer System Validation? 

CSV applies across all GxP-regulated industries. Here is a quick overview: 

Our Quality Engineering Services support all of these industries — from pharma and biotech to medical devices and clinical research. 

Industry  Applicable Regulation  Systems That Need Validation 
Pharmaceuticals  FDA 21 CFR Part 11 / EU Annex 11  LIMS, ERP, MES, DMS 
Medical Devices  FDA 21 CFR Part 820 / ISO 13485  Design control, QMS software 
Biologics / Biotech  FDA cGMP / ICH Q10  Batch record, lab systems 
Clinical Research  FDA 21 CFR Part 11 / GCP  EDC, CTMS, randomization systems 
API Manufacturing  ICH Q7 / GMP  Process control, data logging 

Computerized systems that have an impact on product quality, patient health, and good practices (GxP) must be validated, in order to meet regulatory requirements, ensure the integrity and traceability of information and product quality. 

What Systems Need to Be Validated? 

Not every system requires full validation. The scope depends on GxP impact. A system needs validation if it: 

  • Creates, modifies, or stores GxP records 
  • Controls critical manufacturing processes 
  • Generates electronic signatures or audit trails 
  • Manages quality or safety-related data 
  • Interfaces with equipment that affects product quality 

A system may not need full CSV if it: 

  • Has no GxP data impact 
  • Is infrastructure-level (OS, network) and low risk 
  • Is used purely for administrative tasks with no quality impact 

GAMP 5 Software Categories — Know Your System First 

Before you build a validation flow chart, you must classify your system using GAMP 5 categories. GAMP’s objective is to offer an affordable structure of standards to guarantee that computerized systems are efficient, suitable for their intended purpose, high-quality, and comply with relevant laws. 

GAMP Category  System Type  Validation Effort  Example Systems 
Cat. 1  Infrastructure Software  Low  OS, databases, middleware 
Cat. 3  Non-configured COTS  Low–Medium  Standard office tools 
Cat. 4  Configured COTS  Medium–High  ERP, LIMS, MES 
Cat. 5  Custom / Bespoke Software  High  Proprietary pharma apps 

💡 Pro Tip: Higher the GAMP category → more validation documentation required. 

The Computer System Validation Flow Chart: All 10 Steps 

The validation process involves several steps: planning, defining requirements, coding, testing, installation, documenting everything, running the system, keeping an eye on its performance, and making adjustments as needed. (Source: PMC, National Institutes of Health) 

▶  Step 1 — Project Initiation and Validation Planning 

Everything starts here. This step sets the foundation for the entire CSV project. Key deliverables include: 

  • Validation Plan (VP) — outlines overall strategy, scope, and responsibilities 
  • Project Charter — defines goals, timeline, and team structure 
  • GxP Impact Assessment — determines if full CSV is required 
  • GAMP 5 Category Assignment — classifies the software 

💡 Pro Tip: Without an approved Validation Plan, no other validation activity should begin. This is a hard rule in FDA inspections. 

▶  Step 2 — User Requirements Specification (URS) 

The URS captures what the system must do — from the user’s perspective. It must cover: 

  • Business requirements — why the system is needed 
  • Functional requirements — what the system must do 
  • Data integrity requirements — ALCOA+ principles 
  • Security and access control requirements 
  • Performance, availability, and scalability needs 
  • Regulatory compliance requirements (21 CFR Part 11, Annex 11) 

ALCOA+ Data Integrity Principles 

Letter  Principle  Meaning 
A  Attributable  Data is linked to the person who created it 
L  Legible  Data is readable and permanently recorded 
C  Contemporaneous  Recorded at the time of the activity 
O  Original  First capture — not a copy 
A  Accurate  Free from errors and reflects what happened 
+  Complete, Consistent, Enduring, Available  Extended ALCOA principles for full data integrity 

Every URS requirement must be traceable to a test. If it cannot be tested, it does not belong in the URS. 

▶  Step 3 — Functional and Design Specification (FS / DS) 

Once the URS is approved, the technical team defines how the system will meet those requirements. Two key documents are produced: 

  • Functional Specification (FS) — describes what the system does from a user perspective 
  • Design Specification (DS) — describes how the system technically achieves it 

These documents must include: 

  • System architecture and components 
  • Data flow diagrams 
  • Interface specifications with other systems 
  • Error handling and alarm definitions 
  • Backup and recovery procedures 
  • Security and access control design 

▶  Step 4 — Risk Assessment and Traceability Matrix 

Risk assessment determines where to focus your testing effort — saving time and resources. A traceability matrix connects the requirements in the URS to the tests conducted during qualification, ensuring all operational parameters have been tested and validated. 

Risk Rating Table 

Risk Level  Description  Validation Required 
HIGH  Direct patient safety or product quality impact  Full DQ + IQ + OQ + PQ 
MEDIUM  Indirect quality impact  IQ + OQ at minimum 
LOW  Administrative / non-GxP  Documented risk assessment only 

Requirements Traceability Matrix (RTM) — Sample 

URS Ref  FS Ref  Test Script ID  Tested By  Result 
URS-001  FS-010  IQ-001  Validation Team  ✅ Pass 
URS-002  FS-011  OQ-003  Validation Team  ✅ Pass 
URS-003  DS-005  PQ-002  End Users  ✅ Pass 

▶  Step 5 — Design Qualification (DQ) 

DQ verifies that the design of the system meets the requirements in the URS, FS, and DS — before any physical installation begins. The Design Qualification is completed with the system/equipment order. The Factory Acceptance Test (FAT) is performed at the manufacturer’s site. 

DQ confirms: 

  • Design documentation is complete and approved 
  • System design meets all applicable regulatory requirements 
  • Vendor qualification and audit has been completed 
  • Technical specifications align with URS 
  • Factory Acceptance Testing (FAT) is planned 

▶  Step 6 — Installation Qualification (IQ) 

IQ is the first hands-on qualification phase. It confirms the system was installed correctly. IQ does NOT test functionality — it only verifies correct installation. 

IQ asks: Was the software installed according to vendor specifications, and are all necessary components and documentation in place? 

IQ Check  What Is Confirmed 
Hardware components  Installed per approved specifications 
Software version  Correct version and build number confirmed 
Operating environment  OS, database, network match requirements 
Security configuration  Access controls are in place 
Documentation  All installation documents approved and on file 
Calibration records  Instruments calibrated before testing 

IQ Execution Checklist 

  • Hardware inventory documented 
  • Software version confirmed 
  • Network configuration verified 
  • User access levels set 
  • System clocks synchronized and accurate 
  • IQ Protocol approved BEFORE execution began 
  • IQ Report written and signed 

▶  Step 7 — Operational Qualification (OQ) 

OQ verifies that the system operates as designed — under normal and boundary conditions. OQ asks: Does the software operate as it is supposed to according to the specified functional requirements? 

OQ tests typically cover: 

  • All functions defined in the Functional Specification 
  • Boundary testing — minimum/maximum input values, edge cases 
  • Error handling and alarm responses 
  • User access control — correct permissions per role 
  • Audit trail generation and completeness 
  • Data backup and restore functionality 
  • System performance under load 

OQ Test Script Structure 

Field  What to Include 
Test ID  Unique reference number (e.g. OQ-001) 
Test Objective  What is being tested and why 
Pre-conditions  System state before the test begins 
Test Steps  Step-by-step instructions for the tester 
Expected Result  What correct behaviour looks like 
Actual Result  What was observed during execution 
Pass / Fail  Clear, unambiguous determination 
Tester Signature  Name, date, role 
Reviewer Signature  QA name, date, approval 

⚠  Protocol must be approved BEFORE testing begins. Retroactive approval is a data integrity violation and will trigger FDA observations. 

▶  Step 8 — Performance Qualification (PQ) 

PQ confirms the system performs as intended in real-world operational conditions — with real users and real workflows. PQ asks: Does the whole process perform as it should from start to finish, at the required performance level? 

PQ validates: 

  • End-to-end business workflows under normal operating conditions 
  • Concurrent user performance — does it fail under load? 
  • Integration with connected systems (ERP, LIMS, MES) 
  • Report generation accuracy 
  • Data integrity throughout the full process cycle 

Key Difference: OQ vs PQ 

Comparison  OQ  PQ 
Tests  Individual system functions  End-to-end business workflows 
Users  Validation team  Actual end users 
Conditions  Controlled test environment  Real operational environment 
Focus  Does each function work?  Does the whole process work? 

▶  Step 9 — Validation Summary Report (VSR) 

After all qualifications pass, the Validation Summary Report is prepared and approved. The Test Summary Report is a comprehensive analysis of all testing activities with conclusions about system readiness for operational use. 

The VSR must contain: 

  • Summary of all qualification activities and outcomes 
  • List of all deviations — and documented resolutions 
  • Completed Traceability Matrix (URS → Test → Result) 
  • Risk assessment conclusion 
  • Outstanding issues and action plans 
  • Formal approval signatures: QA, IT, Business Owner 

The VSR is your primary evidence document during an FDA inspection. It must be complete, accurate, and signed before system go-live. 

▶  Step 10 — Go-Live, Change Control, and Periodic Review 

The life cycle of CSV starts from the planning stage to the modification stage. Validation does not end at go-live — this is where ongoing compliance begins. 

At go-live, you must have: 

  • Approved SOPs for system use, administration, and backup 
  • User training records — signed and dated 
  • Formal change control procedures in place 
  • Audit trail monitoring process established 
  • Periodic review schedule set — typically annual 

Any change to a validated system — no matter how minor — must go through formal Change Control before implementation. This includes patches, config changes, new user roles, and hardware upgrades. 

Complete CSV Flow Chart — At a Glance 

#  Phase  Key Document  Output 
1  Planning  Validation Plan  Approved VP + GxP Assessment 
2  User Requirements  URS  Approved URS 
3  Functional / Design Spec  FS + DS  Approved FS / DS 
4  Risk Assessment  RTM + Risk Register  Risk rating + Traceability Matrix 
5  Design Qualification  DQ Protocol  DQ Report 
6  Installation Qualification  IQ Protocol  IQ Report 
7  Operational Qualification  OQ Protocol + Test Scripts  OQ Report 
8  Performance Qualification  PQ Protocol  PQ Report 
9  Validation Summary  VSR  Final Approved VSR 
10  Go-Live + Maintenance  Change Control + Periodic Review  Ongoing compliance records 

The V-Model in Computer System Validation 

The V-Model is the standard development and testing framework used in CSV. It facilitates structured testing, which is crucial for successful validation. Validation relies on a series of documented checks and tests — DQ, IQ, OQ, and PQ — to confirm that the computer system works exactly as designed. 

V-Model Structure: 

URS ──────────────────────────────────► PQ 

  FS ────────────────────────────► OQ 

    DS ────────────────────► IQ 

      Build / Configure  (Base of V) 

Every left-side specification document has a matching qualification test on the right side. This ensures complete test coverage and traceable compliance evidence. 

Key Regulatory Guidelines for CSV in Pharma 

Validating computer systems offers numerous benefits, including improved quality, reduced validation costs and time, and improved GMP compliance with 21 CFR Part 11 regulations. 

Staying audit-ready across all these regulations is where RxCloud’s GMP Audit services become critical — ensuring your systems and manufacturing processes are always inspection-ready. 

Regulation / Guideline  Scope  Key Requirement 
FDA 21 CFR Part 11  USA  Electronic records and e-signatures must be validated 
FDA 21 CFR Part 211  USA  cGMP requirement for validated computer systems 
EU GMP Annex 11  Europe  Full lifecycle validation for computerised systems 
GAMP 5 (2nd Ed. 2022)  Global  Risk-based approach to GxP computerised systems 
ICH Q9  Global  Quality risk management framework 
ICH Q10  Global  Pharmaceutical Quality System requirements 
WHO TRS 937  Global  GMP for pharmaceutical products 

Common CSV Mistakes That Trigger FDA Observations 

Avoid these validation errors — each one is a known source of Form 483 observations and Warning Letters: 

Mistake  Risk Level  Impact 
No approved Validation Plan before testing  🔴 Critical  All test results are invalid 
Test scripts written after testing is complete  🔴 Critical  Data integrity violation 
Unresolved deviations in test reports  🔴 Critical  System cannot be released 
No Traceability Matrix  🔴 Critical  Cannot demonstrate requirement coverage 
Change control bypassed post go-live  🔴 Critical  Validated state is broken 
Audit trail disabled or not reviewed  🟠 High  21 CFR Part 11 violation 
Periodic reviews overdue  🟠 High  Validated state becomes questionable 
Training records missing or unsigned  🟡 Medium  Compliance gap on inspection 

CSV Documentation Package — Complete Checklist 

Use this checklist to confirm your validation package is inspection-ready: 

Planning Phase 

  • Validation Plan (VP) — approved 
  • GxP Impact Assessment — signed 
  • GAMP Category Assignment — documented 

Specification Phase 

  • User Requirements Specification (URS) — approved 
  • Functional Specification (FS) — approved 
  • Design Specification (DS) — approved 

Risk & Traceability 

  • Risk Assessment — completed and reviewed 
  • Requirements Traceability Matrix (RTM) — complete 

Qualification Phase 

  • DQ Protocol + Report — approved 
  • IQ Protocol + Report — approved 
  • OQ Protocol + Report — approved 
  • PQ Protocol + Report — approved 

Summary & Closure 

  • Validation Summary Report (VSR) — approved 
  • All deviations closed — documented 
  • User training records — signed and dated 
  • SOPs in place — approved 

Post Go-Live 

  • Change control SOP — in place 
  • Periodic review schedule — set 
  • Audit trail monitoring — active 

FAQ: Computer System Validation Flow Chart 

Q1. What is the purpose of a computer system validation flow chart? 

It maps the entire CSV lifecycle — from planning through retirement. It keeps teams aligned, ensures no step is missed, and provides a clear audit trail for regulators. 

Q2. Is IQ, OQ, PQ mandatory for all pharma systems? 

Only for GxP-impacting systems. The required depth depends on risk level and GAMP category. Low-risk systems may need only IQ and OQ. 

Q3. What happens if I skip the Validation Plan? 

Any test results produced without an approved Validation Plan are potentially invalid. FDA inspectors check document approval dates against execution dates. 

Q4. How often must a validated system be reviewed? 

Typically every 12 months, or whenever a significant change, incident, or regulatory update occurs — whichever comes first. 

Q5. Does a software update require re-validation? 

Yes — any change to a validated system must go through formal change control and impact assessment. Depending on scope, partial or full re-qualification may be needed. 

Start Your CSV Journey the Right Way 

A well-built computer system validation flow chart does more than satisfy regulators. It protects patients, preserves data integrity, and gives your organisation the confidence to operate at scale. 

Whether you are validating a new LIMS, ERP, MES, or custom pharma application — following a structured, risk-based CSV lifecycle is the only approach that works. 

At RxCloud, our team of GxP compliance experts handles the full CSV lifecycle for you — documentation, testing, IQ/OQ/PQ execution, and regulatory reporting. 

👉  Explore our CSV Validation Services   |   Get in Touch with Our Team