Pharmaceutical manufacturing operates in one of the most demanding hygiene environments of any industry. Clean-room garments — coveralls, gloves, hoods, shoe covers — are a primary contamination control barrier. How they are laundered, inspected, and stored is a critical GMP requirement.

In India, the revised Schedule M of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act has significantly tightened requirements for pharmaceutical hygiene, including garment management. Non-compliance is a major risk in US FDA, WHO-GMP, and EU-GMP inspections.

Clean-Room Laundry Compliance Snapshot

ISO 5
Cleanest room class requiring validated garments
<1 µm
Particle size garments must prevent from entering
100%
Garment inspection required after every wash cycle

Why Standard Commercial Laundry Is Not Enough for Pharma

  • Particle generation: Clean-room garments must be processed in validated low-particulate environments — standard laundry rooms generate too many airborne particles.
  • Detergent residue: Pharmaceutical garments must be rinsed with purified water to prevent ionic contamination.
  • Drying and packaging: Garments must be dried in HEPA-filtered environments and packaged in clean-room-compatible packaging before re-entry.
  • Documentation: Every garment must have a traceable wash history — wash cycle count affects antistatic and particle-barrier properties.

Schedule M Requirements for Garment Management

  • Dedicated gowning rooms with positive pressure in sterile areas
  • Garments for highest-grade areas must be sterilised (autoclaved) after laundering
  • Written SOPs for garment issue, use, collection, laundering, inspection, and disposal
  • Garment qualification — new garment types must be tested before use in clean rooms
  • Regular monitoring of garment integrity at defined intervals
“During our US FDA inspection, the auditor spent nearly an hour reviewing our garment management SOP and laundry validation records. Having documented, validated processes was the difference between a successful inspection and an observation.”

— QA Head, Pharmaceutical Manufacturer, Pune

Key Equipment Requirements

  • Pass-through tunnel washers with fully validated and documented wash programs
  • Purified water final rinse — conductivity-monitored to confirm rinse water quality
  • HEPA-filtered drying tunnels — ISO 5 equivalent air quality during drying
  • RFID or barcode tracking — for per-garment wash cycle count management

Pharma Facility Garment Laundry Assessment

Our team understands GMP requirements. We assess your current process and recommend compliant equipment solutions.