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30 Days Into the U.S. Government Shutdown: What It Means for the FDA and for You

Nov 6, 2025 | Life Sciences, Medical Device Safety and Quality, Medical Devices, Pharmaceutical and Cosmetics, Unique Device Identification

As the U.S. federal government shutdown stretches past the 30-day mark, its ripple effects are being felt across the life sciences sector. While the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) continues some core operations, many key regulatory, quality, and policy activities have slowed or stalled, creating uncertainty for pharmaceutical, medical device, and cosmetics manufacturers planning 2026 market-access strategies.

Here’s what’s happening, what’s delayed, and what you can do to stay ahead.

The FDA Is Still Working—But Only on Essentials

Under its contingency plan, the FDA continues to operate functions that are critical to protecting public health, including:

  • Responding to imminent threats to human life (e.g., serious safety issues and recalls)
  • Import screening for high-risk food and medical products
  • Continuing user-fee-funded application reviews, where funding remains available

That said, much of the FDA’s workforce is furloughed, and user-fee reserves are depleting quickly. The agency has warned that if the shutdown continues, programs supported by those fees could grind to a halt once funds are exhausted.

What’s on Hold: Inspections, New Applications, and Policy Development

While essential safety oversight continues, the shutdown has effectively paused or slowed routine regulatory operations. These include:

  • Acceptance of new applications requiring user fees (NDAs, PMAs, 510(k)s, etc.)
  • Domestic and foreign inspections of non-high-risk facilities
  • Development of new guidance documents, rulemakings, and policy updates
  • Non-critical meetings and communications with industry

For many companies, this means longer review cycles, uncertain launch timelines, and delayed clarity on upcoming frameworks, particularly around labeling, AI/ML-enabled products, and supply-chain transparency.

Detailed Impact by Product Category

Product Category Affected FDA Activity Status during Shutdown Implications for Industry Key Actions / Risk Mitigation
Pharmaceuticals (Drugs/Biologics) New marketing applications (NDAs, BLAs, ANDAs) On hold: FDA not accepting new submissions requiring user fees Launch delays; global knock-on effects Reassess launch timelines, prioritize accepted filings, document delays
Ongoing reviews (user-fee funded) Limited continuation with reduced capacity Slower interactions and reviews Stay proactive in communication, anticipate slower response cycles
Medical Devices 510(k), de novo, PMA submissions Stalled if user-fee required Market entry delays, backlog risk Align timelines, monitor for post-shutdown surge
Facility inspections and audits Paused for routine sites Delayed supplier qualification; later enforcement surge Maintain internal audit readiness, document inspection deferrals
Food & Cosmetics Import screening, inspections Safety-critical activities continue; others delayed Import/export bottlenecks; limited guidance clarity Build supply-chain buffers, ensure documentation strength
Policy & Labeling Initiatives Rulemaking, guidance, labeling/UDI frameworks Paused Delayed regulatory clarity; uncertainty for 2026 compliance Adjust planning assumptions, maintain readiness for multiple scenarios
Inspections & Enforcement Recalls, high-risk enforcement Active Enforcement continues for imminent threats Stay compliant—oversight is reduced but not absent
Global Market Access U.S. approvals feeding international submissions Delayed Global launch timelines impacted Re-map regulatory dependencies, adjust sequencing

What to Expect Next

If the shutdown continues much longer, the FDA may begin prioritizing only public-health-critical and fee-funded programs, leading to deeper slowdowns. When the agency fully reopens, expect:

  • A surge in inspection and enforcement activity
  • Backlog clearance priorities that could reorder review timelines
  • Accelerated policy rollouts to make up for lost time

What Companies Should Do Now

  1. Recalibrate timelines for submissions and market-access plans, especially for Q1–Q2 2026 milestones.
  2. Maintain compliance discipline even during reduced oversight; enforcement will likely tighten post-shutdown.
  3. Document delays and communications for future audit trails.
  4. Monitor global regulators, as U.S. delays may cascade into EU, UK, and APAC market approvals.
  5. Prepare for catch-up inspections—ensure CAPAs and internal audit programs are current and defensible.

Bottom Line

While the FDA hasn’t gone dark, it’s operating on minimal power. For regulatory and quality leaders, this is the time to stress-test timelines, fortify compliance, and build flexibility into 2026 planning. The shutdown’s impact won’t end when funding is restored; the real test will be how quickly industry and regulators recover from the backlog that follows.

At LexisNexis Reed Tech, we can help you stay compliant, anticipate regulatory shifts, and maintain audit-readiness through the uncertainty so your teams are prepared for whatever comes next.