Medical Device Recall Firms
Which medical device companies have the most FDA recalls? Rankings based on 38,509 recall records.
The FDA tracks every company responsible for a medical device recall. Large manufacturers of implantable devices, surgical equipment, and diagnostic tools naturally appear more frequently in recall data — they produce thousands of different products and are subject to strict post-market surveillance requirements. A recall often reflects an active quality monitoring program rather than negligence. The FDA's MAUDE database and MDR system generate a comprehensive record of device safety actions going back decades.
All Recalling Firms
2,918 firms found in FDA device recall records. Sorted by recall count.
| # | Recalling Firm | Recalls | Most Recent | View |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 101 | Beckman Coulter, Inc. | 80 | Dec 23, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 102 | ConMed Corporation | 80 | Nov 18, 2022 | View Recalls |
| 103 | Stryker Medical Division of Stryker Corporation | 80 | Feb 18, 2026 | View Recalls |
| 104 | Philips Medical Systems Nederlands | 79 | Mar 25, 2019 | View Recalls |
| 105 | Angiodynamics Inc. (Navilyst Medical Inc.) | 78 | Feb 22, 2021 | View Recalls |
| 106 | Draeger Medical, Inc. | 78 | Oct 15, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 107 | Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics Inc | 77 | Jul 7, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 108 | Baxter Healthcare Corp. | 74 | Oct 12, 2016 | View Recalls |
| 109 | Angiodynamics, Inc. | 74 | Feb 4, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 110 | Hobbs Medical, Inc. | 73 | Oct 4, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 111 | Cardinal Health | 73 | Nov 1, 2022 | View Recalls |
| 112 | Navilyst Medical, Inc | 72 | Jan 9, 2015 | View Recalls |
| 113 | Randox Laboratories Ltd. | 72 | Jun 7, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 114 | Zavation | 71 | Mar 25, 2021 | View Recalls |
| 115 | Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, Inc. | 71 | Jul 29, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 116 | Karl Storz Endoscopy | 70 | Dec 19, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 117 | Ethicon, Inc. | 70 | Oct 8, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 118 | LeMaitre Vascular, Inc. | 70 | Feb 10, 2026 | View Recalls |
| 119 | Remel Inc | 70 | Oct 20, 2022 | View Recalls |
| 120 | Wright Medical Technology, Inc. | 69 | Mar 6, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 121 | Covidien, LP | 68 | Sep 25, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 122 | Stryker GmbH | 68 | May 28, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 123 | Tosoh Bioscience Inc | 68 | Aug 7, 2020 | View Recalls |
| 124 | Datascope Corp. | 67 | Feb 6, 2026 | View Recalls |
| 125 | Datascope Corporation | 67 | Aug 5, 2022 | View Recalls |
| 126 | Nobel Biocare Usa Llc | 66 | Dec 17, 2021 | View Recalls |
| 127 | Microbiologics Inc | 66 | Dec 2, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 128 | Philips Medical Systems, Inc. | 65 | Apr 23, 2015 | View Recalls |
| 129 | C.R. Bard Inc | 65 | Nov 6, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 130 | Siemens Medical Solutions USA Inc. | 65 | Feb 20, 2017 | View Recalls |
| 131 | Cook Incorporated | 64 | Nov 26, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 132 | Waldemar Link GmbH & Co. KG (Mfg Site) | 64 | Feb 11, 2026 | View Recalls |
| 133 | Busse Hospital Disposables, Inc. | 63 | Nov 30, 2023 | View Recalls |
| 134 | Maquet Cardiovascular Us Sales, Llc | 62 | Nov 20, 2020 | View Recalls |
| 135 | Vyaire Medical | 62 | Apr 10, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 136 | Carestream Health Inc. | 61 | Jul 2, 2014 | View Recalls |
| 137 | Aesculap Implant Systems LLC | 61 | Jul 20, 2023 | View Recalls |
| 138 | Heartware, Inc. | 60 | Oct 31, 2023 | View Recalls |
| 139 | International Medsurg Connection, Inc. | 59 | Jun 23, 2017 | View Recalls |
| 140 | Abbott Laboratories | 58 | Nov 13, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 141 | Codman & Shurtleff, Inc. | 58 | Nov 10, 2015 | View Recalls |
| 142 | Alcon Research LLC | 58 | Nov 24, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 143 | Covidien LP | 57 | Sep 19, 2024 | View Recalls |
| 144 | Abiomed, Inc. | 56 | Jan 27, 2026 | View Recalls |
| 145 | Synthes USA HQ, Inc. | 56 | Oct 15, 2013 | View Recalls |
| 146 | Toshiba American Medical Systems Inc | 56 | Jan 4, 2018 | View Recalls |
| 147 | COVIDIEN MEDTRONIC | 55 | May 22, 2018 | View Recalls |
| 148 | Ethicon Endo-Surgery Inc | 54 | Sep 11, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 149 | Cook Medical Incorporated | 53 | Sep 18, 2025 | View Recalls |
| 150 | bioMerieux, Inc. | 53 | Jun 26, 2025 | View Recalls |
Firm names are taken directly from FDA recall records and may include subsidiaries or contract manufacturers.
Understanding Medical Device Recall Data
Why Are Medical Devices Recalled?
Medical device recalls occur when a device fails to perform as intended, is defective, or poses an unreasonable risk to health. Common triggers include software bugs in implantable devices, sterility failures in surgical instruments, electrical malfunctions, labeling errors, and component failures. Unlike drug recalls, device recalls can involve complex engineering failures that only become apparent after widespread deployment. The FDA requires manufacturers to report and investigate all adverse events associated with their devices through the Medical Device Reporting (MDR) system.
High-Recall Companies Are Not Necessarily Unsafe
Companies like Medtronic, Abbott, and Boston Scientific appear frequently in recall data because they manufacture enormous product portfolios — thousands of different implants, diagnostic systems, and surgical tools. A company with 10,000 device models in active use will have more recalls than a company with 100. The severity of the recall (Class I through III) and the speed of the company's response are better indicators of safety culture than raw recall count. Many device recalls are proactive, voluntary actions initiated by manufacturers before any patient harm occurs.
Frequently Asked Questions
A medical device recall is an action taken to address a product that violates FDA law. This includes removing or correcting devices that are defective, could cause health problems, or may have been manufactured in violation of FDA regulations. Recalls can involve removing the product from market, correcting it, or simply notifying users of a potential issue (called a "correction" rather than a "removal"). The FDA classifies recalls into three classes based on severity, from Class I (most serious) to Class III (least serious).
Do not panic — an implanted device recall does not automatically mean the device must be removed. Many implant recalls involve software updates, monitoring protocols, or labeling changes rather than explantation. Contact your physician immediately to discuss whether your specific device (identified by its serial number or model number) is affected and what the recommended action is. In most cases for Class II or III recalls, the risk of surgery to remove the device outweighs the risk posed by the recall issue. Your doctor will follow FDA and manufacturer guidance for your specific situation.
Medical device recalls are typically self-initiated — the manufacturer discovers a quality issue through internal testing, complaint analysis, or adverse event reports and notifies the FDA. Once a recall is underway, the company must notify all direct accounts (distributors, hospitals, clinics) through recall communications. The FDA oversees the recall strategy and effectiveness checks. Manufacturers must submit periodic status reports and, for Class I recalls, verify that they have reached all affected users. The FDA publishes all recall information in its enforcement database.
Use the search bar above to look up any company by name. You can also browse the full recall database and filter by manufacturer name using the keyword search. For specific device recalls by product name or model number, use the Browse All Recalls page. The FDA also maintains the MAUDE (Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience) database at FDA.gov for more detailed adverse event reports submitted about specific devices.
Search Device Recalls
Look up recalls by device name, firm, classification, or reason using our full FDA database.