The UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (“MHRA”) has published a targeted consultation on the indefinite recognition of the CE-mark for medical devices placed on the market in Great Britain (“GB”) (i.e., England, Scotland and Wales) (the “Consultation”), which will run until 10 April 2026.  The Consultation aims to complement wider planned reforms to the UK medical device regulatory framework that are expected to be announced later this year.  The Consultation applies to GB only as medical devices placed on the Northern Ireland market must comply with the EU medical devices framework and be CE-marked in any event.

The Consultation follows an earlier public consultation on pre-market regulatory changes for medical devices and in vitro diagnostic (“IVD”) devices (see our prior blog post here), where the MHRA announced its intention to further consult on the indefinite recognition of CE-marked medical devices in GB.

Background

Following Brexit, in 2021, the MHRA introduced UKCA-marking as an independent product safety regime for medical devices placed on the UK market.  The original intent was for the UKCA mark to become mandatory, subject to transitional provisions to allow CE-marked devices to be placed on the GB market until June 2023.  However, those transitional measures have been repeatedly extended.  Currently, manufacturers with devices that comply with the EU medical devices framework can place them on the GB market, potentially up until June 2028 or June 2030, depending on the specific device and relevant EU legislation the device complies with.

The Consultation proposes to further amend the UK Medical Devices Regulations 2002, as amended (“UK MDR”), to allow manufacturers of CE-marked devices to continue to place them on the GB market with a view to ensuring continuity of supply of devices across GB.

Latest Proposals

The Consultation addresses three key proposals:

  1. An extension to the current GB transitional arrangements for devices that comply with the prior EU Medical Device Directive (“EU MDD”) to align with the transitional timelines published by the EU.
    • The EU Medical Device Regulation 2017/745 (“EU MDR”) came into force in May 2021, replacing the EU Medical Devices Directive 93/42/EEC (“EU MDD”).  The European Commission extended transitional arrangements for certain medical devices to transition from the EU MDD to the EU MDR until 31 December 2028, whereas the current transitional period under the UK MDR expires on 30 June 2028.  The MHRA is thus proposing to extend the current transitional period for devices that comply with the EU MDD to 31 December 2028, to allow such devices to continue to be placed on the GB market for the same period as they may be placed on the EU market.
  1. Indefinite recognition of devices that comply with the EU MDR or the EU In Vitro Diagnostic Medical Device Regulation 2017/746 (“EU IVDR”).
    • Under current GB arrangements, after 30 June 2028 or 30 June 2030 (depending on the specific device), CE-marked devices can no longer be placed on the GB market.  Instead, all devices will need to conform with the UK MDR.The MHRA is proposing to extend the current transitional arrangements, allowing devices that comply with the EU MDR or EU IVDR to be placed on the GB market indefinitely.  The MHRA is particularly interested in views on whether this change should apply for all devices, or only for devices which are classified the same or lower, risk category under UK MDR as they are under the relevant EU device regulations.  
      • If indefinite recognition is accepted for all CE-marked devices, this would in effect mean that the classification rules under the EU MDR / EU IVDR are accepted for all devices on the market in GB. If, however, indefinite recognition applies only for devices that are classified as the same, or lower, risk category in GB, this would mean that the GB classification rules would apply and take precedence over the EU classification rules in cases where the device classification is higher under the UK MDR.
      Devices that are recognised under this proposal would be able to continue to be placed on the GB market without additional checks by any UK Approved Body.
    • Manufacturers would regardless need to continue to (i) register their device with the MHRA, (ii) comply with post-market surveillance requirements under the UK MDR and (iii) notify the MHRA if the CE mark under the EU MDR or EU IVDR, as applicable, is withdrawn or suspended, and in turn remove the device from the GB market.
  1. The introduction of international reliance routes for devices that comply with the EU MDR or EU IVDR where the classification is higher under the UK MDR.
    • For devices that are classified higher under the UK MDR, compared with the EU MDR/EU IVDR, the MHRA is proposing an international reliance route.  This route would be in place from 30 December 2030, when the current transitional arrangements end. 
    • Manufacturers would have the choice between either (i) the international reliance route or (ii) the UKCA conformity assessment process.  The former would require a review by an UK Approved Body but may be more streamlined than the UKCA conformity assessment process due to reliance on assessments that will have already been performed in the EU.
    • Self-declared CE-marked Class I and Class A devices, which would be classified as Class IIa under the UK MDR, would not be eligible for the international reliance route and would instead need to undergo UKCA conformity assessment.

Next Steps

These changes will help realise the UK’s aims to become “one of the top three fastest countries in Europe for access to MedTech by 2030.”  They will also help to deliver key commitments in the government’s 10-Year Health Plan for England and Life Sciences Sector Plan to transform the NHS for the benefit of patients, drive economic growth in the UK’s life sciences sector, and improve the AI and medical device landscape in the UK. 

Interested parties wishing to respond to the Consultation should do so before 10 April 2026 using the survey found here

If you would like to discuss the MHRA’s Consultation and what the proposed changes to the regulatory framework for medical devices in the UK may mean for your company’s operations, please contact our specialist UK and EU medical device regulatory team.

Covington will continue to follow developments and provide further updates, including on future planned MHRA consultations.

Photo of Sarah Cowlishaw Sarah Cowlishaw

Advising clients on a broad range of life sciences matters, Sarah Cowlishaw supports innovative pharmaceutical, biotech, medical device, diagnostic and technology companies on regulatory, compliance, transactional, and legislative matters.

Sarah is a partner in London and Dublin practicing in the areas of EU…

Advising clients on a broad range of life sciences matters, Sarah Cowlishaw supports innovative pharmaceutical, biotech, medical device, diagnostic and technology companies on regulatory, compliance, transactional, and legislative matters.

Sarah is a partner in London and Dublin practicing in the areas of EU, UK and Irish life sciences law. She has particular expertise in medical devices and diagnostics, and on advising on legal issues presented by digital health technologies, helping companies navigate regulatory frameworks while balancing challenges presented by the pace of technological change over legislative developments.

Sarah is a co-chair of Covington’s multidisciplinary Digital Health Initiative, which brings together the firm’s considerable resources across the broad array of legal, regulatory, commercial, and policy issues relating to the development and exploitation of digital health products and services.

Sarah regularly advises on:

obligations under the EU Medical Devices Regulation and In Vitro Diagnostics Medical Devices Regulation, including associated transition issues, and UK-specific considerations caused by Brexit;
medical device CE and UKCA marking, quality systems, device vigilance and rules governing clinical investigations and performance evaluations of medical devices and in vitro diagnostics;
borderline classification determinations for software medical devices;
legal issues presented by digital health technologies including artificial intelligence;
general regulatory matters for the pharma and device industry, including borderline determinations, adverse event and other reporting obligations, manufacturing controls, and labeling and promotion;
the full range of agreements that span the product life-cycle in the life sciences sector, including collaborations and other strategic agreements, clinical trial agreements, and manufacturing and supply agreements; and
regulatory and commercial due diligence for life sciences transactions.

Sarah has been recognized as one of the UK’s Rising Stars by Law.com (2021), which lists 25 up and coming female lawyers in the UK. She was named among the Hot 100 by The Lawyer (2020) and was included in the 50 Movers & Shakers in BioBusiness 2019 for advancing legal thinking for digital health.

Sarah is also Graduate Recruitment Partner for Covington’s London office.

Photo of Tamzin Bond Tamzin Bond

Tamzin Bond is an associate in the Life Sciences Regulatory team. Tamzin advises clients in the innovative pharmaceutical, biotech, food, medical device and diagnostics sectors on a range of regulatory matters.

Tamzin has experience in the firm’s London and Dubai offices, as well…

Tamzin Bond is an associate in the Life Sciences Regulatory team. Tamzin advises clients in the innovative pharmaceutical, biotech, food, medical device and diagnostics sectors on a range of regulatory matters.

Tamzin has experience in the firm’s London and Dubai offices, as well as in-house legal experience as the legal secondee to a large international pharmaceutical company.

Prior to joining the firm, Tamzin completed her Ph.D. in Chemistry, focusing on the development of targeted molecular imaging probes to assist in the diagnosis and treatment disease, and gained experience working for a clinical phase biotechnology company.

In addition to client matters, Tamzin is also a member of Covington’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee and is actively involved in the firm’s Social Mobility Network.