The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) is responsible for the controls and authorisations that apply to blood establishments (BE) and controls that apply to hospital blood banks (HBB) and sites that collect, test and supply human blood or blood components intended for transfusion.
You are a BE and need to hold a blood establishment authorisation (BEA) if you:
collect blood for the purpose of transfusion or manufacture of a medicinal product
conduct donor tests
process blood
store or distribute blood
You will also need a BEA if you:
carry out secondary processing of blood components, including
irradiation
cell washing
pack splitting
collect blood or blood components for pre-deposit autologous transfusion (where the donor and recipient is the same person)
import blood from a non-EU country (known as a ‘third country’)
You are a HBB and need to submit an annual blood compliance report if you are a unit within a hospital which:
stores and distributes blood
performs compatibility tests on blood and blood components exclusively for use in hospital facilities, including hospital-based transfusion activities
If you receive blood from a HBB for transfusion purposes but do not perform compatibility tests on site you are a ‘facility’. Facilities do not have to submit a blood compliance report as long as there is service level agreement, or similar document, in place which clearly show that the HBB that supplies you is responsible for these functions.
If you’re not sure which one you are, contact the MHRA by emailing gmpinspectorate@mhra.gov.uk or calling 020 3080 6000.
Blood establishments (BEs)
To operate as a blood establishment you must:
have a BEA
be inspected by the MHRA at least once every 2 years
have a system for reporting any serious adverse blood reactions or events to the MHRA (haemovigilance/SABRE)
pay authorisation and haemovigilance fees each year and a further fee following an inspection
BE inspections
You will be inspected by the MHRA when you first apply for your BEA.
After each inspection you will get a follow-up letter describing the areas that need correction to get or keep your authorisation.
You will have to complete a pre-compliance report before an inspection unless it is a triggered inspection, which are only notified at short notice.
For significant changes between inspections you must submit an Interim Compliance report (MS Word Document, 381 KB).
Send your completed Pre-inspection compliance report (MS Word Document, 418 KB) to the email address given by the inspector. Hard copies of compliance reports will not be accepted.
The applicant at the blood establishment needs to sign the form.
The application will trigger an inspection. If you pass the inspection you will be authorised to hold a BEA and you should receive your authorisation within 90 days of your application.
To maintain your authorisation you will be inspected at least once every 2 years to ensure that you remain in compliance with the requirements of the legislation.
Make a change to a BEA (variation)
If your business or premises goes through any major change which will alter the authorised activities, sites or personnel, you must apply for a variation to your authorisation before making the change.
have a system for reporting any serious adverse blood reactions or events to the MHRA (haemovigilance/SABRE)
submit an annual compliance report and pay a compliance fee (only applied to HBB)
pay a haemovigilance fee (unless you are a facility)
We will inspect your organisation periodically depending on your organisation’s level of risk, which is based on information in your compliance reports.
Blood compliance reports (BCRs)
HBBs must submit a BCR every year. This provides details about the activities you carry out, together with specific information relating to:
processes
procedures
equipment
personnel
The compliance report is used to assess your organisation for risk. The higher your risk rating, the more likely your organisation is to be inspected.
Hospital blood banks must complete the compliance report and the declaration form. PleaseThe ensuremajority allof the questions thatneedfree-textresponseshavebeenremoved,somesectionsare completednot prioravailableandsomequestionnumbersdonotseemto submission.beinorderinsomesections.Please ensure thatall the BCRquestions documentare iscompleted savedbefore asyou thesubmit name of the hospital.form.
The person responsible for signing the “Compliance Report completed by” section on the BCR declaration form must ensure all the questions are completed on the BCR, and the completed answers are true and accurate. Submit the report using the Blood compliance report and declaration form.
The compliance report template provides space for 10 external distribution sites. If more than 10 are supplied, you can report additional sites including the same information using the 20262025 distribution sites addendum page.
Blood facilities do not need to complete a compliance report or declaration but must ensure that they have an agreement in place with the HBB that intends to supply them with blood components. The agreement should confirm the responsibility of the facility to comply with the BSQRs, with specific reference to storage (where relevant), traceability and reporting of serious adverse reactions and events.
The deadline for submission of reports is 30 April 2026.2025.
Report a serious adverse event or reaction related to blood
Safety incidents related to blood and blood components are legally reportable under the Blood Safety and Quality Regulations 2005 (as amended) by blood establishments, hospital blood banks and facilities on behalf of the patients and families involved. There is no requirement for patients or families to report safety incidents directly. However, if you should have a concern about blood safety and quality, contact the MHRA whistleblower by emailing whistleblower@mhra.gov.uk or telephone 07778 168204.
As a BE, HBB or facility you must report all serious adverse event and reactions related to blood to the MHRA using SABRE. You will need to register with SABRE before you can report. SABRE does not replace your local reporting arrangements.
Published updated information in the 'Hospital blood banks (HBBs) and facilities' and 'Blood Compliance Reports (BCR)', including links to updated documents.
31 December 2020
Removed links to EC directives and European guidance. Removed some information about the blood compliance report declaration form.
3 April 2020
Added note regarding temporary regulatory flexibility during the coronavirus (COVID-19 outbreak).
17 March 2020
We have updated the page with the current 2020 BCR documents and guidance notes
1 April 2019
Updated blood facility declaration form
22 February 2019
2019 update
20 February 2018
Updated instructions/guidance notes for 2018
4 August 2017
New link to SHOT added to the page.
6 March 2017
Blood Compliance Report information for 2017 added
29 March 2016
Added section about new blood safety regulations - “Reducing the risk of Transfusion-transmitted Hepatitis E Virus infections in patients undergoing Solid Organ Transplantation and Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation”