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Introduction to FMEA

5
  • What is Risk in FMEA? Why Prevention Important?
  • Introduction to FMEA | Purpose & Key Benefits
  • History of FMEA – NASA to AIAG to AIAG-VDA
  • Types of FMEA – DFMEA, PFMEA, and FMEA-MSR
  • FMEA in APQP & IATF 16949 Context

Foundations of FMEA

7
  • Function Requirement Failure in FMEA
  • Severity in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples
  • Occurrence in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples
  • Detection in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples
  • RPN vs Action Priority (AP) – Why RPN is Outdated
  • FMEA Linkages – ISO 9001, IATF 16949, APQP, PPAP.
  • Why AIAG-VDA 7-Step Approach?

Step-1: Planning & Preparation in FMEA

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  • Step 1 – Planning & Preparation in FMEA (AIAG-VDA Standard)
  • The Five Ts in FMEA – Intent, Timing, Team, Task, Tools
  • Defining Scope, Boundaries & Assumptions in FMEA
  • Cross-Functional Team Formation in FMEA

Step 2: Structure Analysis in FMEA

4
  • Step 2 – Structure Analysis in FMEA
  • System, Subsystem, and Component Breakdown in FMEA
  • Process Flow – Structure Tree & Block Diagram in FMEA
  • Motor Stator Winding – Structure Analysis in FMEA Example

Step 3: Function Analysis in FMEA

3
  • Step 3 – Function Analysis in FMEA
  • Defining Functions & Requirements in FMEA
  • How to Write Measurable Requirements in FMEA

Step 4: Failure Analysis in FMEA

6
  • Step 4 – Failure Analysis in FMEA (Failure Modes, Effects, Causes)
  • Function Net in FMEA | Chain of Functions
  • Failure at Mode Level – Failure Modes
  • Effects of Failure in FMEA
  • Causes of Failure in FMEA (Design vs Process)
  • Cascading Failures – Failure Cause Mode Effect Relationship in FMEA

Step 5: Risk Analysis in FMEA

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  • Current Detection Controls in FMEA
  • Current Prevention Controls in FMEA (AIAG-VDA Standard)
  • Risk Evaluation in FMEA
  • Action Priority (AP) vs RPN in FMEA
  • Action Priority in FMEA (AIAG-VDA Standard)
  • Step 5 – Risk Analysis in FMEA
  • Severity in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples
  • Occurrence in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples
  • Detection in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples

Step 6: Optimization in FMEA

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  • Tracking & Closing Actions in FMEA
  • Step 6 – Optimization in FMEA

Step 7: Results Documentation in FMEA

3
  • Customer Communication & Lessons Learned in FMEA
  • FMEA Report (Summary Table)
  • Step 7 – Results Documentation in FMEA

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    • Doc 1.3

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  • Severity in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples

Severity in FMEA (AIAG-VDA) | Explained with Examples

FMEA Expert
Updated on October 5, 2025

8 min read

In today’s automotive manufacturing industry, producing good quality, safety, and customer satisfaction is non-negotiable. One of the most powerful tools used to achieve this is Failure Modes and Effects Analysis (FMEA). The concept of Severity in FMEA is playing an important role. It evaluates the seriousness of a potential failure’s effect on the customer. 

In this article, we’ll explore the meaning of Severity as defined in the AIAG-VDA FMEA standard, understand its role in the 7-step FMEA process, and learn how to apply Severity ratings effectively using real-world automotive examples. 


What is Severity in FMEA and Why It Matters #

In automotive manufacturing, preventing failure is more cost-effective and safer than correct it in regular mass production. That’s where FMEA (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis) comes in as a structured tool to identify and reduce risk of potential failures.

In FMEA methodology, there is a powerful rating: Severity.

Severity measures the seriousness of the consequences of a failure mode. What consequences occur if the failure happens. It simply asks:

“If this failure happens, how bad will be the impact on the customer, system, or end user?”

The higher the severity, the more risk there is. Even if the occurrence is rare or detection is strong.


What is Severity in FMEA? (AIAG-VDA Definition) #

According to the AIAG-VDA FMEA Handbook (2019):

“Severity is the consequence of a failure mode on the function as perceived by the customer (internal or external).”

It is a scale from 1 to 10, where:

  • 10 = Most Severe (e.g., safety failure or legal non-compliance)
  • 1 = Least Severe (e.g., no noticeable impact)

Severity is always given based on the effect only, not the cause.

Where Does Severity Come From in FMEA? #

1. From the Effect of Failure Mode

Severity is always linked to the effect – what happens if the failure mode occurs.

2. From the Function and Requirement

Every FMEA starts with the function (what the system/component/process is supposed to do) and the associated requirement (how well it should do it).

  • If the function is safety-critical, any failure will likely result in Severity = 9 or 10.
  • If the requirement is linked to legal, regulatory, or customer-specific expectations, the effect of non-compliance increases the severity rating.

3. From the Customer’s Perspective

Severity must be judged from the end user’s or next process customer’s viewpoint:

  • How will the failure affect the driver, passenger, or assembly line downstream?
  • Will it cause injury, dissatisfaction, recall, or compliance failure?

It is always recommended to get the severity and top level failures from your customer. This will make sure that customer failures into your FMEA. Similarly you can do it with your supplier.

This best practice shows the linkages of FMEAs throughout the supply chain.

4. From the AIAG-VDA Severity Tables

Ultimately, you assign the rating using the standard 1–10 scale provided in the AIAG-VDA Handbook, based on the type of FMEA:

  • Use DFMEA table for design-related effects
  • Use PFMEA table for process-related effects
  • In both, Severity comes from matching the described effect to the most appropriate rating description

DFMEA Severity Rating Table (AIAG-VDA) #

RatingEffectAIAG-VDA Severity CriteriaDescriptionExample (Automotive)
10Very highAffects safe operation of the vehicle and/or other vehicles, the health of driver or passenger(s) or road users or pedestrians.Involves Safety of end userHazardous – Without warningAirbag fails to deploy during crash
9Very highNoncompliance with regulations.Involve legal and regulations.Hazardous – With warningBrake performance reduced, warning light active
8HighLoss of primary vehicle functionLoss of primary functionEngine fails to start
7HighDegradation of primary vehicle functionMajor degradationAC cooling drastically reduced
6ModerateLoss of secondary vehicle function.Secondary function failureInfotainment system doesn’t work
5ModerateDegradation of secondary vehicle function.Comfort/Convenience issuePower window moves slowly
4ModerateVery objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or haptics.Minor issueDashboard light flickers
3LowModerately objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or haptics.Appearance issueMinor scratch on panel
2LowSlightly objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or haptics.Very Slight – Nuisance onlySlight rattle in gear knob
1Very lowNo effectNoneCosmetic defect invisible to user

Rule of Thumb: If Severity ≥ 9, it always need action and special care, regardless of other ratings.


PFMEA Severity Rating Table (AIAG-VDA) #

RatingEffectImpact to Your PlantImpact to Ship-to plant/ customerImpact to End UserExample (Automotive)
10HighFailure may result in health and safety risk for manufacturing worker.Failure may result in health and safety risk for manufacturing worker.Affect health of driver or passengers or road users or pedestrians.Missing weld on seat frame – Seat detaches during crash
9HighPlant regulatory non-compliancePlant regulatory non-complianceNoncompliance with regulations.Brake fluid underfilled – Braking compromised with dashboard warning
8Moderately high100% production may have to be scrapped.Line shutdown greater than full shift. Stop shipment or field repair or replacement neededLoss of primary vehicle functionEngine not assembled correctly – Vehicle won’t start
7Moderately highSorting required or less than 100% may have to be scrapped. Deviation or decrease line speed or added manpower.Line shutdown from 1 hour to full shift.Degradation of primary vehicle functionMisaligned suspension component – Rough or unstable drive
6Moderately low100% of production rework off-lineLine shutdown upto one hourLoss of secondary vehicle functionSpeaker wire not connected – No sound from infotainment
5Moderately lowPortion of production rework off-linePossibility for defective product, sorting required, no line shutdownDegradation of secondary vehicle functionDoor rubber seal misaligned – Wind noise at high speed
4Moderately low100% of production rework in-stationDefective product triggered major reaction plan, no sorting requiredVery objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or hapticsPaint overspray on inner panel – Not customer-facing but visible at service
3LowPortion of production rework in-stationDefective product triggered minor reaction plan, no sorting requiredModerately objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or hapticsVisible dust under clear coat on hood
2LowSlight inconvenience to processNo sorting, requires feedback to supplierSlightly objectionable appearance, sound, vibration, harshness, or hapticsSlight label misalignment on component
1Very lowNo effectNo effectNo effectNon-visible cosmetic variation inside part enclosure

Where Severity Fits in the 7-Step FMEA Process #

Severity is determined during Step 4: Failure Analysis of the AIAG-VDA 7-Step Approach:

  1. Planning & Preparation (5Ts)
  2. Structure Analysis
  3. Function Analysis
  4. Failure Analysis
  5. Risk Analysis  ← 🎯 Severity is rated here
  6. Optimization
  7. Results Documentation

In this step, teams:

  • Assign a Severity rating to identified failure effects
  • Followed by Preventive, Detection action and associated occurrence and detection rating.
  • Based on all three ratings calculate the Action Priority for respective risks.

Tip: If multiple effects exist, always use the highest Severity.


Real-World Automotive Severity Examples (DFMEA + PFMEA) #

1st Example – DFMEA: Electric Parking Brake

  • Function: Hold the vehicle stationary when parked
  • Failure Mode: Brake doesn’t engage
  • Effect: Car rolls away on incline
  • Severity: 10 – Safety risk, no warning

2nd Example – PFMEA: Seat Assembly

  • Process Step: Bolt tightening
  • Failure Mode: Bolt under-torqued
  • Effect: Seat becomes loose, fails crash test
  • Severity: 9 – Safety degradation, with potential warning

3rd Example – PFMEA: Label Printing

  • Failure Mode: Label unreadable
  • Effect: Loss of traceability
  • Severity: 6 – Quality issue, non-safety

Case Study – Seatbelt DFMEA

  • Function: Restrain passenger
  • Requirement: 10 kN load capacity
  • Failure Mode: Webbing tears at 6 kN
  • Effect: Passenger unrestrained in crash
  • Severity: 10 – Life-threatening

Common Mistakes in Assigning Severity (and How to Fix Them) #

MistakeCorrection
❌ Assuming rare events = low severity✅ Severity is independent of occurrence
❌ Using vague terms like “serious problem”✅ Describe measurable, real-world effects
❌ Using high severity (9-10) for every case✅ Base it on customer impact, safety, compliance
❌ Not reviewing Severity after design changes✅ Always re-evaluate after any change
❌ Confusing local vs. end-user effect✅ Rate based on final effect on customer

Best Practices for Using Severity in FMEA #

  • Use correct severity tables (DFMEA vs PFMEA)
  • Involve cross-functional teams – design, quality, safety, manufacturing
  • Always justify severity ratings clearly in the FMEA sheet
  • Link high Severity to special characteristics (SC, CC, safety)
  • Use severity to drive Action Priority (AP) decisions
  • Reflect Customer-Specific Requirements (CSRs) in severity evaluations

Severity Evaluation Checklist (Use in DFMEA / PFMEA) #

  • Are all effects clearly defined?
  • Are we using the correct severity table (Design or Process)?
  • Is the end user and customer’s perspective considered?
  • Have we assigned the highest Severity for multiple effects?
  • Are ratings traceable and justified with system-level logic? Ex. Have we considered severity from customer.

Why Severity is Critical in FMEA #

  • It is a first step in Risk Evaluation (before Occurrence/Detection)
  • It ensures safety and compliance are never ignored
  • It aligns design, manufacturing, and quality priorities
  • It keeps the focus on preventing customer-impacting issues

Summary / Key Takeaways #

  • Severity = seriousness of effect, not frequency (Occurrence) or detectability (Detection)
  • Rated on a 1-10 scale as per AIAG-VDA standard
  • if severity ≥ 9 = High Priority based on Action Priority in FMEA, even if Occurrence/Detection are low
  • Always consider end-user impact, not just internal consequences
  • A correct Severity rating ensures FMEA remains a true preventive tool

Can Severity be reduced by better detection?

No. Detection does not influence Severity. Only changing the design or function can change in severity, because change in design have a different effect associated with that design

What if multiple effects exist for a failure?

Use the highest Severity rating among the effects.

Are DFMEA and PFMEA severity scales different?

Yes. Each has its own criteria. Refer to the correct table in the AIAG-VDA Handbook.

When should Severity be re-evaluated?

After design/process changes or customer feedback affecting function or effect.

Can high Severity still be acceptable if occurrence is low?

Not necessarily. Severity ≥ 9 requires action even if occurrence is rare. Always refer AP table for that.

Updated on October 5, 2025

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Table of Contents
  • What is Severity in FMEA and Why It Matters
  • What is Severity in FMEA? (AIAG-VDA Definition)
  • Where Does Severity Come From in FMEA?
  • DFMEA Severity Rating Table (AIAG-VDA)
  • PFMEA Severity Rating Table (AIAG-VDA)
  • Where Severity Fits in the 7-Step FMEA Process
  • Real-World Automotive Severity Examples (DFMEA + PFMEA)
  • Common Mistakes in Assigning Severity (and How to Fix Them)
  • Best Practices for Using Severity in FMEA
  • Severity Evaluation Checklist (Use in DFMEA / PFMEA)
  • Why Severity is Critical in FMEA
  • Summary / Key Takeaways
  • Free FMEA Course
  • Services
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