A policy states an organization's intent and direction on a subject, so it answers what the rule is and why it exists. [3] [4] A procedure is the specified way to carry out an activity or a process, so it answers how the work gets done. [1] Policies live at the strategic level and are usually owned and approved by senior leadership, while procedures are operational and owned by the people closest to the work. [3] Standard operating procedures and work instructions are types of procedures, sitting at increasing levels of detail under the policy they support. [2]
Key characteristics
- A policy sets a rule or position: the what and the why. A procedure sets the method: the how. [3] [4]
- Policies are technology and tool independent. Procedures name specific tools, settings, and acceptance criteria. [3]
- Policies are centrally owned and approved by leadership. Procedures are decentralized and owned by process experts. [3]
- A policy changes rarely, when the organization's position changes. A procedure changes often, when the way the work is done changes. [3]
- SOPs and work instructions are procedures, ordered from process-level down to task-level detail. [1] [2]
- One policy is usually supported by many procedures. A single procedure rarely needs its own policy. [4]
Example
Allergen control on a food production line
A food plant's allergen control policy is one paragraph: the site will prevent cross-contact between allergen-containing and allergen-free products, and no product ships without a documented allergen changeover. That is the rule and the reason. It does not tell anyone how to clean a line. The procedure that sits under it, the allergen changeover SOP, is where the how lives: sequence the run to put allergen products last, break down the filler, wash down with the validated detergent at the right concentration, swab the contact surfaces, record the ATP reading, and hold the line until QA releases it. Below that, a work instruction card at the wash station shows exactly how to dose the detergent and where to swab. The policy never mentions detergent concentration. The procedure never restates why allergens matter. Together they cover the position and the practice.
Comparison
Policy vs procedure
| Aspect | Policy | Procedure |
|---|---|---|
| Question it answers | What is the rule, and why | How to do the work, step by step |
| Level | Strategic and organization-wide | Operational and task-specific |
| Owner | Senior leadership or a governing body | Department heads and subject-matter experts |
| Detail | High level, tool independent | Concrete steps, tools, and acceptance criteria |
| How often it changes | Rarely, when the position changes | Often, when the method or tooling changes |
| Examples | Quality policy, safety policy, data retention policy | SOPs and work instructions |
How SOPX handles this
Procedures are the layer SOPX builds. A supervisor records the process on a phone or uploads an existing PDF, and AI turns it into a structured procedure: ordered steps, a trimmed video clip per step, titles, and descriptions, published in under 10 minutes. That is the how. Policies stay human-authored on top, because a rule or position is a judgment call for leadership, not something to generate from a recording. SOPX keeps every procedure versioned, searchable, and translatable into 50+ languages, so when a policy says a documented changeover is required, the procedure that proves it is one QR scan away. For a fuller breakdown, see the policy vs procedure guide.
Related use case: Process Standardization →Frequently asked questions
What is the simplest way to tell a policy and a procedure apart?
Are SOPs and work instructions policies or procedures?
Do I need a policy for every procedure?
Who should own each document?
Why do procedures change more often than policies?
Sources
Statements above draw on the references below. Numbers in the text link to the matching entry.
- [1]ISO 9000 Terminology: What exactly are procedures and processes?Advisera 9001Academy · Accessed 2026-07-08
- [2]ISO 9001:2015 Processes, Procedures and Work InstructionsThe 9000 Store · Accessed 2026-07-08
- [3]Policies vs Standards vs Controls vs ProceduresComplianceForge · Accessed 2026-07-08
- [4]The Difference between Quality Management Policies and ProceduresisoTracker · Accessed 2026-07-08