Hi, Further to Gautam's explanation, you can follow 80-20 principle for actionables. As long as I know, there is no industry best practice or thumb rule for threshold limit. Having said that, I must agree that most of the organizations follow 100 or 150 as threshold limit depending on their process maturity. I always suggest to use 80-20 principle for threshold limit as it will give scope for continuous improvements all the time. Also this will cover all the process steps over a period of time. Every time you look into FMEA for threshold limit, concentrate on top RPNs which are contributing to 80% of sum of RPNs. Please see below example: Process Step - B, G, A, C, I, H, D, E, J, F RPN 504, 432, 280, 240, 210, 180, 120, 27, 4, 2 Cumulative % 25%, 47%, 61%, 73%, 83%, 92%, 98%, 100%, 100%, 100% here you can consider 210 as threshold and continue on improving process steps with more than 210 RPN (B,G,A and C in this case). once you are done with improvements, you can revise the RPN and calculate the threshold again. You can repeat the cycle till your process reaches the satuaration level. Hope this helps...