If you work in construction materials testing, you've probably seen the phrase in a project spec: calibration provider must be AASHTO accredited. Most CMT labs know they need it. Far fewer can explain what it actually means, how it differs from ISO 17025 accreditation, or how to verify that a certificate will hold up under AASHTO re:source assessment scrutiny.
Quick Answer: AASHTO accredited calibration means a calibration lab has been assessed by the AASHTO re:source program and found to meet both ISO/IEC 17025 requirements and additional transportation-specific criteria. It is required by many DOT and FHWA project specifications because it demonstrates competence beyond the general ISO 17025 baseline for the specific equipment and methods used in construction materials testing.
ISO/IEC 17025 is the internationally recognized standard for testing and calibration laboratories. It covers management systems, technical competence, equipment traceability, and measurement uncertainty reporting — and any credible calibration provider should hold it.
But ISO 17025 is a general framework. It applies equally to labs calibrating analytical balances in pharmaceutical facilities and labs calibrating proving rings for geotechnical testing. It doesn't specify which equipment types a lab is qualified to handle or which test methods fall within its scope.
The AASHTO re:source program administers accreditation specifically for the transportation and construction materials testing industry. To earn AASHTO accredited calibration status, a lab must:
ISO 17025 accreditation does not automatically confer AASHTO accreditation. The two are related but not interchangeable. A lab can be ISO 17025 accredited without any AASHTO scope — and for many project specifications, that isn't sufficient.
AASHTO accredited calibration ensures traceability and accountability within a defined compliance chain.
When a project spec requires AASHTO accredited calibration, it's not asking for "a lab with credentials." It's specifying a program with known oversight, documented scope, and enforceable standards.
The compliance chain works like this:
A break anywhere in that chain creates a compliance gap. The most common breakpoints are at steps three and four: a lab uses a provider with general ISO 17025 accreditation but no AASHTO scope, or receives a certificate that doesn't clearly document accreditation status. Neither will pass an AASHTO assessment.
Knowing what a compliant certificate should contain is just as important as knowing which labs to call. A compliant calibration certificate should include:
That last point is where certificates most often fall short. A certificate that says "accredited to ISO/IEC 17025" without specifying AASHTO re:source accreditation does not confirm AASHTO compliance.
Search the AASHTO re:source accredited lab directory directly on their website. You can search by lab name, location, or accreditation scope. Confirm that:
If the lab doesn't appear in the directory, or if the scope doesn't match your equipment, the certificate won't hold up under review — regardless of what it says on paper.
Using a provider without the correct AASHTO scope introduces significant audit risk.
During an AASHTO assessment, assessors will review your calibration records as part of evaluating overall lab compliance. Certificates that don't demonstrate calibration by a provider with the appropriate AASHTO scope are likely to result in a finding — ranging from a corrective action request to a qualification issue depending on severity.
In more serious cases, a gap in the compliance chain can call prior test results into question, since calibration records are used to demonstrate equipment performance over time.
Most compliance gaps come from assumptions, not negligence:
A pre-audit review of your calibration certificates — checking scope codes and accreditation documentation, not just expiration dates — can catch these gaps before an assessor does. For a practical checklist, see our CMT Equipment Calibration & Audit Readiness Checklist.
Accredited Labs is listed in the AASHTO re:source directory and holds accreditation across the calibration scopes CMT labs need most. Our certificates are built to hold up under assessment review with thorough scope documentation included.
Learn more about our CMT calibration services, or contact us to confirm coverage for your equipment.
What does AASHTO accredited calibration mean? AASHTO accredited calibration means a calibration laboratory has been assessed by the AASHTO re:source program and meets both ISO/IEC 17025 requirements and transportation-specific competency criteria for the equipment types within its accredited scope.
Is AASHTO accreditation the same as ISO 17025? No. ISO 17025 is a general accreditation standard that applies to any calibration or testing lab. AASHTO accreditation is specific to the transportation and construction materials testing industry and requires an additional on-site assessment by AASHTO re:source. A lab can hold ISO 17025 without holding AASHTO accreditation.
How do I verify a calibration lab's AASHTO accreditation? Search the AASHTO re:source accredited lab directory on the AASHTO re:source website. Confirm the lab's accreditation is active and that its listed scope covers the equipment type you had calibrated.
What should an AASHTO-compliant calibration certificate include? A compliant certificate should include the lab's name and address, a unique certificate number, calibration date, item description, calibration procedure, measurement results with uncertainty statements, NIST traceability, the AASHTO re:source accreditation number, and the specific accreditation scope covering the calibration performed.
Why do DOT project specs require AASHTO accredited calibration? DOT and FHWA project specifications require AASHTO accredited calibration to ensure traceability and accountability within a defined compliance chain. AASHTO accreditation confirms that a provider meets industry-specific competency standards, not just general lab quality requirements.