EMA: European Vaccine Approval

How the European Medicines Agency evaluates and approves vaccines for the EU.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) is responsible for the scientific evaluation of medicines in the European Union. Through its centralized procedure, EMA assesses vaccine quality, safety, and efficacy, enabling marketing authorization valid across all 27 EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway.

Centralized Procedure

The centralized procedure is mandatory for certain medicines, including vaccines:

CHMP Review Process

The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) conducts the scientific review:

  1. Manufacturer submits Marketing Authorization Application (MAA)
  2. CHMP assigns two "rapporteur" countries to lead review
  3. Comprehensive assessment of quality, safety, efficacy
  4. Peer review by other committee members
  5. Opinion issued (positive or negative)
  6. European Commission grants final authorization

European Public Assessment Reports (EPARs)

Transparency

EMA publishes full scientific assessment details in EPARs, including evaluation rationale, product characteristics, and approval history. This level of transparency is a key feature of the EU system.

EMA vs. FDA: Key Differences

Sources & Citations

Related Pages