A quality escape is a defect, nonconformance, or incorrect condition that passes through a manufacturer’s normal quality controls and is only detected after it has moved to the next internal process step, to the customer, or into service in the field.
Key characteristics
In industrial and regulated manufacturing environments, a quality escape typically:
- Originates in design, manufacturing, inspection, documentation, or supplier processes
- Bypasses or is missed by in-process checks, inspection plans, or automated controls
- Is discovered downstream, often during later operations, customer receipt, product use, service, or investigation
- Triggers formal nonconformance, containment, and corrective action activities
A quality escape can involve physical characteristics (dimensions, materials, assembly), documentation (incomplete travelers, missing certifications), configuration and traceability errors, or software and firmware issues embedded in products or tooling.
Operational context
In operations, quality escapes are usually handled through structured processes such as:
- Creation of a nonconformance report and, when needed, Material Review Board (MRB) disposition
- Containment actions, such as lot holds, recalls, field inspections, or rework campaigns
- Root cause and corrective action (for example, 8D or RCCA) to prevent recurrence
- Updates to control plans, inspection and sampling, work instructions, and training
Digital systems such as MES, QMS, and ERP may track quality escapes using specific defect codes, customer complaint records, or escape incident records, often linked to traceability and genealogy data to identify impacted parts and customers.
Common confusion
- Nonconformance vs. quality escape: A nonconformance is any failure to meet a requirement. It becomes a quality escape only when it passes beyond the controls or process step where it should reasonably have been detected.
- Internal vs. external escape: An internal escape is found at a later in-house operation. An external escape is found by the customer or in the field after shipment or release.
Relation to risk and compliance
In regulated industries, quality escapes are often treated as significant risk events. They can drive additional documentation, risk assessments, audits, and updates to quality management system controls, especially when safety, regulatory, or contractual requirements are affected.