People often swap the words “condition” and “criterion” without noticing the shift in meaning. That casual switch can derail contracts, confuse product specs, and muddy feedback forms.
Knowing the difference keeps your writing precise, your agreements safe, and your goals crystal-clear.
Core Distinction
A condition is a situational requirement that must already be true or be made true before something else can happen. A criterion is a yardstick used to judge, rank, or choose among options.
Think of a condition as a door that has to be unlocked first; a criterion is the list you use to pick the best key.
Everyday Example
When a rental ad states “lease signing is conditional on first-month rent paid,” the payment is the condition. When the same ad adds “we select the most reliable tenant,” reliability becomes the criterion for choosing.
Grammar and Usage
Condition usually pairs with prepositions like “on,” “upon,” or “that.” Criterion pairs with “for” or “against.”
Mixing these prepositions instantly signals to readers that the writer is unsure of the term’s role.
Plural Forms
Condition becomes conditions; criterion becomes criteria. Using “criterias” or “criterions” marks the text as non-standard.
Contract Language
Lawyers separate the two by labeling conditions as “precedent” and criteria as “evaluation matrix.” A precedent condition must be satisfied or the contract never comes alive. An evaluation matrix guides how parties will later judge performance, quality, or compliance.
Risk Allocation
When you write “delivery is conditional on port clearance,” you place clearance risk on the seller. When you write “goods must meet fitness-for-purpose criteria,” you keep assessment risk with the buyer.
Product Development
Design teams set conditions such as “must run on 5 V power” to filter out impossible concepts early. They then list criteria like “lowest noise” or “smallest size” to rank the surviving concepts.
Prototype Gates
A gate review checklist first verifies conditions: legal approval, budget sign-off, safety clearance. Only after those boxes are ticked do managers score prototypes against criteria such as user delight and manufacturing cost.
Hiring Workflows
Recruiters treat background checks as conditions; without clearance, the candidate never reaches the interview shortlist. Once the list is formed, they apply criteria like communication skill and culture fit to rank finalists.
Scorecard Design
Put gatekeeper items in a yes-no condition column. Place scored items like strategic thinking in a weighted criteria column. This layout prevents managers from giving high scores to an unqualified applicant.
Academic Assessment
A thesis proposal faces conditions: enrollment status, supervisor approval, ethics form. After clearance, the dissertation is judged by criteria such as originality, rigor, and contribution.
Rubric Clarity
Professors who mix conditions into rubrics confuse students. Keep “submission before deadline” as a condition in the syllabus. Reserve the rubric for criteria like argument strength and citation quality.
Software Specifications
Functional conditions state what the system shall do before it is accepted: authenticate user, connect to server, load database. Non-functional criteria then rate how well it does those things: speed, uptime, accessibility score.
Acceptance Tests
Write condition tests as binary pass-fail assertions. Write criteria tests as measurable thresholds or ranges. This split lets automated suites run fast gate checks and detailed benchmarks separately.
Marketing Offers
“Buy one, get one free” hides two elements. The purchase is the condition that unlocks the reward. The reward itself may carry criteria such as “selected items only” or “while stocks last,” guiding which free product is offered.
Ad Copy Tips
State the condition in bold to prevent user frustration. List criteria in fine print to manage inventory expectations.
Quality Systems
ISO templates separate preventive conditions from evaluative criteria. Calibration records must exist before an audit starts; that is a condition. The auditor then uses criteria like traceability and accuracy to rate the calibration process.
Audit Trails
Log condition checks separately from criterion scores. Auditors can then see quickly whether a failure happened at the doorway or inside the evaluation room.
Personal Goal Setting
A marathon goal may carry the condition “doctor clearance obtained.” After clearance, criteria such as weekly mileage, resting heart rate, and nutrition consistency guide training tweaks.
Progress Tracking
Use a red-yellow-green dashboard for conditions and a 1-to-10 scale for criteria. The visual split keeps motivation high and prevents you from scoring yourself on something that is simply not allowed yet.
Common Missteps
Writers often turn every desire into a condition, creating impossible gatekeepers. Others sprinkle criteria into mandatory checklists, bloating simple tasks.
Quick Fixes
Ask “must this happen first, or should this merely influence quality?” If it must happen first, it is a condition. If it shapes degree of goodness, it is a criterion.
Checklist for Writers
Read every requirement aloud and insert “before anything else” at the end. If the sentence still feels true, label it a condition. Otherwise, move it to your criteria list.