PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063535
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063535
According to Mordor Intelligence, the sterile injectables cDMO market size is projected to expand from USD 15.64 billion in 2025 and USD 17.13 billion in 2026 to USD 26.92 billion by 2031, registering a CAGR of 9.47% between 2026 to 2031.

This report is Segmented by Molecule Type (Small Molecule, Large Molecule / Biologics), Services (Formulation Development and More), Dosage Form (Vials and Ampoules, Prefilled Syringes, Specialty Injectables, and Others), End-User (Pharmaceutical Companies, Biotechnology Companies, and Others), and Geography (North America, and More). The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Biologics represented about 40% of the 55 novel drugs cleared by the FDA in 2024, up from 25% five years earlier. Continuous antibody engineering, gene therapy breakthroughs, and a wave of biosimilars are pushing innovators toward partners that can manage sterile fill-finish at clinical and commercial scale. Patent expirations for agents such as adalimumab and bevacizumab have expanded biosimilar pipelines, yet very few mid-tier firms possess validated biologics suites. CDMOs with proven track records in cytotoxic handling and isolator technology are capturing disproportionate demand as antibody-drug conjugates and bispecifics require specialized containment.
Building a dedicated aseptic line can exceed USD 300 million and take up to five years. With clinical success rates near 10% for early-stage assets, many mid-size companies see limited return on such capital and therefore outsource. Industry surveys show global fill-finish utilization surpassed 85% in 2024, with lyophilization lines even higher, creating 18- to 24-month scheduling backlogs. Virtual biotech models, now more than 60% of early biologics developers, depend on CDMOs for everything from toxicology runs to commercial release.
Lyophilization remains the preferred stabilization method for heat-sensitive biologics, yet global freeze-drying capacity lags demand by an estimated 15-20%, with lead times for commercial-scale campaigns extending to 18-24 months. The capital intensity of lyophilization lines, USD 15-25 million per unit, plus 12-18 months for installation and validation, deters rapid capacity expansion, while energy costs for multi-day freeze-drying cycles have surged 30-40 % since 2022. Sponsors face a strategic choice: accept extended timelines that delay market entry or reformulate products for liquid-stable presentations, a path that requires additional regulatory filings and clinical bridging studies. CDMOs with existing lyophilization capacity leverage this scarcity to command premium pricing, yet the bottleneck constrains overall market growth. The constraint is most acute for biosimilars, where price competition limits sponsors' willingness to absorb premium CDMO fees, creating a bifurcated market where innovator biologics secure capacity while biosimilar developers queue.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Small molecules generated 62.34% of the sterile injectables CDMO market revenue in 2025, anchored by entrenched hospital injections in anesthesia and oncology. Biologics, although starting from a lower base, are growing at a 10.34% CAGR to 2031. This momentum reflects premium pricing of USD 50,000-150,000 per patient and technical barriers that limit competition. Antibody-drug conjugates and GLP-1 analogs depend on CDMOs with cytotoxic suites, an asset held by fewer than 20 global providers. Dual-capability CDMOs that run adjacent small-molecule and biologic lines can flex capacity based on pipeline swings, but margins clearly favor biologics due to batch values and extended exclusivity.
Robust biosimilar development is another catalyst. Developers racing to seize share after patent expiry for monoclonal antibodies rely on third-party plants to meet tight launch windows. Continuous manufacturing remains nascent yet offers promise for future small-molecule cost reduction. Meanwhile, biologics outsourcing decisions hinge on cold-chain logistics and lyophilization slots, issues that magnify the importance of an integrated partner. As a result, the Sterile injectables CDMO market is seeing capital flow toward biologic capacity, though generic oncology injections still sustain base volumes in small-molecule lines.
Analytical and testing services contributed 39.95% of segment revenue in 2025 as regulators tightened assay expectations for potency, endotoxin, and extractables. Yet manufacturing services are accelerating at a 9.67% CAGR because constructing new clean rooms is uneconomic for many sponsors. Modern fill-finish suites now integrate robotics for vial handling and camera-based inspection that cut operator contact and elevate output. Formulation development, though smaller, is mission-critical for viscosity reduction in concentrated biologics.
Demand for bundled contracts is rising. Sponsors prefer a single master service agreement covering formulation, analytics, and commercial batches to reduce hand-offs. Consequently, stand-alone analytical labs face slower growth unless they offer niche assays such as cell-based potency tests for gene therapies. CDMOs adopting process analytical technology for in-line release can shorten batch disposition from weeks to hours, a future competitive edge. Over the forecast, the sterile injectables CDMO market is expected to see manufacturing's revenue share inch upward as capital investment migrates toward high-speed lines equipped for ready-to-use containers.
North America generated 45.25% of the sterile injectables CDMO market revenue in 2025, buoyed by dense biotech clusters in Boston, North Carolina, and California. Catalent's acquisition by Novo Holdings for USD 16.5 billion, followed by Novo Nordisk purchasing three Catalent plants for USD 11.7 billion, signals vertical integration aimed at securing GLP-1 fill-finish slots. Thermo Fisher added capacity by taking over Sanofi's Ridgefield, New Jersey site in 2025, and Vetter broke ground on a clinical plant in Illinois slated for 2029. High labor costs are a headwind, yet FDA credibility keeps North American capacity in high demand for global launches.
Europe hosts extensive aseptic facilities across Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, collectively representing regional capacity. Annex 1 revisions catalyzed facility upgrades that strengthen Europe's reputation for quality, while France's tax incentives are bringing fresh biologics investment. Private equity remains active, demonstrated by EQT and ADIA closing Recipharm's purchase in 2025. Spain's lower labor rates lure cost-sensitive projects, although regulated quality standards remain uniform across EMA states. The United Kingdom's post-Brexit divergence introduces added documentation, but alignment on GMP keeps trade friction low.
Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing region with a 10.48% CAGR through 2031. Samsung Biologics switched on its 180,000-liter Plant 5 in 2025 after investing KRW 1.9 trillion, making South Korea a leading biologics hub. WuXi Biologics is scaling multiple Chinese sites to serve domestic demand and exports. India's large talent pool and competitive costs attract small-molecule projects, while Australia's Pfizer plant is undergoing an AU 150 million antimicrobial upgrade, finishing in 2026. Regulatory harmonization remains a work in progress, yet steady improvements have drawn big-pharma audit approvals, reinforcing Asia-Pacific's role in the Sterile injectables CDMO market.