PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2065720
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2065720
According to Mordor Intelligence, the medical devices electronic data interchange market size is expected to increase from USD 1.59 billion in 2025 to USD 1.77 billion in 2026 and reach USD 3.07 billion by 2031, growing at a CAGR of 11.56% over 2026-2031.

This report is Segmented by Component (Solutions/Software, Services), Deployment (Cloud-Based, On-Premises, Hybrid, Multi-channel/Portal/Mobile EDI), Transaction Type (Procurement, Logistics, Settlement, Product Data Sync), End User (Device Manufacturers, Distributors, Gpos, Hospitals/IDNs, Ascs), and Geography (North America, Europe, APAC, MEA, South America). Forecasts in Value (USD).
UDI regulations are driving the need for accurate data in the medical devices electronic data interchange market. By 2026, manufacturers face submission requirements across the EU, Australia, and Switzerland, each with unique data attributes and protocols, increasing the burden on manual processes. This challenge is pushing mid-sized manufacturers to adopt workflows that enhance UDI-DI data before integration into item masters, catalogs, and trading-partner records. Compliance readiness is now a key factor in vendor selection, moving earlier in the buying cycle.
Hospitals are prioritizing touchless procure-to-pay workflows to reduce administrative delays and improve transaction accuracy. Buyers now evaluate platforms based on order accuracy, invoice matching, and payment speed. In 2026, advancements like AI-driven orchestration platforms and integrated procure-to-pay solutions are setting new standards, with hospitals expecting automation to extend beyond standard purchase orders to include replenishments and bill-only activities.
Cybersecurity challenges significantly impact the electronic data interchange market for medical devices. Each new trading partner increases the risk perimeter and operational costs. Healthcare breaches in 2025 and 2026 exposed millions of records, prompting procurement teams to demand stronger HIPAA and HITECH security attestations. PHI flows through various workflows, including orders and invoices, creating additional risks. Smaller integrators face financial strain as they invest in enterprise-grade controls, slowing market adoption in security-sensitive accounts.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
In 2025, services accounted for 53.12% of the medical devices electronic data interchange market share and are projected to grow at an 11.76% CAGR from 2026 to 2031. This growth reflects the ongoing demand for managed integration, trading-partner onboarding, exception resolution, and compliance support post-deployment. With projects often involving 3 to 5 buyer-side systems, one-time software installations rarely meet operational needs, keeping post-implementation services essential. Services revenue remains tied to maintaining accurate and usable transaction flows in a regulated environment.
While software solutions are critical, buyers prefer automation integrated into live workflows rather than as separate tools. SPS Commerce's MAX, launched in February 2026, demonstrates how vendors enhance automation to retain account value. However, service teams remain vital for managing exceptions, onboarding, and governance changes. Software drives differentiation, but services ensure recurring revenue, user trust, and customer retention.
Cloud-based deployment held 41.87% of the medical devices electronic data interchange market in 2025 and is forecast to grow at an 11.98% CAGR from 2026 to 2031. This growth is driven by demand for flexible transaction capacity, reduced maintenance, and alignment with ERP modernization. Buyers increasingly prefer unified platforms that integrate EDI, API, and managed file transfer, as seen with SEEBURGER's platform inclusion in the 2026 Gartner Magic Quadrant for iPaaS.
On-premises models remain relevant for organizations with strict data residency or control policies, particularly those with legacy ERP systems. Hybrid setups are gaining traction as they connect on-premises systems to cloud networks without full replacements. Multi-channel EDI and API-enabled models are becoming more relevant, while portal and mobile connectivity support smaller suppliers with limited IT resources.
In 2025, North America accounted for 42.25% of the medical devices electronic data interchange market, maintaining its leadership in transaction automation and platform deployment. The region benefits from established ANSI X12 usage, a mature GPO framework, and entrenched electronic transaction practices, creating a strong adoption base among providers, distributors, and manufacturers. The U.S. is upgrading older value-added networks to cloud-native platforms with enhanced analytics, exception handling, and bill-only automation, ensuring North America's continued dominance despite stricter security reviews following recent breaches.
Europe is becoming increasingly significant as UDI mandates and digital health initiatives drive structured device data exchanges across countries and regulatory records. Manufacturers face challenges in managing submission and update requirements across regulated databases, emphasizing the need for consistent cross-border data pipelines. Germany leads efforts to address EDI process gaps, while France enforces stricter supply interruption notifications, enhancing supplier-provider data exchanges. Switzerland adds another submission endpoint, and the UK, Italy, and Spain remain key hospital procurement markets supporting regional demand.
Asia-Pacific is the fastest-growing region, with a projected CAGR of 12.88% from 2026 to 2031, driven by government digitization programs, expanded insurance coverage, growing device manufacturing, and cloud-first infrastructure in countries like China, India, Japan, and South Korea. Healthcare infrastructure digitization is scaling rapidly, reflecting broader regional and global supply chain advancements. While the Middle East and Africa are in early adoption stages and South America remains the smallest market, both regions offer opportunities for suppliers adept at managing multi-currency conditions and infrastructure challenges.