Preventive Maintenance Management: The Complete Guide
Preventive maintenance (PM) is the practice of performing scheduled maintenance tasks before equipment fails. Done well, it reduces unplanned downtime by 35–45%, cuts maintenance costs by 25–30%, and extends asset life by up to 20%. This guide covers everything — types, scheduling, KPIs, checklists, and how CMMS software for preventive maintenance automates the entire program.
to unplanned downtime
with advanced maintenance programs
What Is Preventive Maintenance?
Preventive maintenance (also written as preventative maintenance) is any planned maintenance work performed on equipment before it fails. The goal is not to react to breakdowns — it’s to prevent them from happening in the first place.
PM tasks typically include inspections, lubrication, cleaning, calibration, part replacements, and functional testing. The schedule is set in advance, based on time intervals, equipment usage readings, or monitored condition data — not on a technician noticing something is wrong.
- Wait for equipment to fail
- Emergency repair, rushed parts
- 3–5× higher repair cost
- Unplanned production loss
- Safety risks from sudden failures
- Shorter overall asset lifespan
- Schedule work before failure occurs
- Planned downtime at your timing
- 20–30% lower maintenance costs
- Production loss minimized or eliminated
- Safety issues caught during inspections
- Longer asset lifespan through regular care
The performance gap is well documented. Organizations with advanced maintenance programs achieve 20–30% lower maintenance costs compared to reactive approaches (McKinsey & Company). Deloitte estimates unplanned downtime costs U.S. industrial manufacturers $50 billion every year — losses that a structured PM program is specifically designed to prevent. Emergency repairs cost 3–5 times more than the same work done on a planned basis.
The 4 Types of Preventive Maintenance
Not all PM strategies are alike. The right approach depends on the asset’s criticality, failure patterns, and the monitoring capability available. Most mature programs use a combination of all four types.
Time-Based Maintenance (TBM)
Tasks are performed at fixed calendar intervals regardless of how much the equipment has run. The schedule is typically derived from OEM recommendations and historical data.
Usage-Based Maintenance (UBM)
Maintenance is triggered by a meter reading — operating hours, production cycles, mileage, or other usage metrics — rather than calendar time. More accurate for equipment with variable duty cycles.
Condition-Based Maintenance (CBM)
Maintenance is performed when sensors or inspections detect early signs of wear or impending failure — a vibration spike, temperature rise, or pressure drop crossing a defined threshold.
Predictive Maintenance (PdM)
Advanced analytics and machine learning use historical and real-time data to forecast when a failure is likely to occur — before any visible symptoms appear. The most precise, most data-intensive type.
For a complete breakdown of each type with industry examples, see our detailed guide: Types of preventive maintenance explained →
How to Build a Preventive Maintenance Schedule
A PM schedule is only as good as the asset data and criticality analysis behind it. Here’s the process maintenance teams use to build one that actually gets followed.
Build your asset inventory
Document every asset — make, model, location, age, OEM specs, and current condition. You cannot schedule maintenance for equipment you haven’t catalogued. A CMMS asset registry centralizes this in one place accessible to everyone.
Prioritize by asset criticality
Not every asset deserves the same PM attention. Rank assets by the consequence of failure — production impact, safety risk, replacement cost, and downtime cost per hour. Focus your highest-frequency PM on your highest-criticality assets. A CMMS criticality score automates this ranking.
Set PM intervals from OEM guidelines and MTBF data
Start with manufacturer recommendations as your baseline. Then adjust using your own Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) data — if a component consistently fails at 800 hours, set your PM interval at 700 hours, not 1,000. Let your data drive your schedule, not just the manual.
Create PM checklists and task instructions
Every PM work order needs a checklist — specific steps, measurements to record, pass/fail criteria, and required parts. This captures institutional knowledge, ensures consistency across technicians, and creates a defensible audit trail for compliance. eWorkOrders stores checklists directly on work orders.
Load into your CMMS and automate
Enter every PM into your CMMS with its trigger (date, meter reading, or condition threshold), assigned technician, required parts, and estimated labor hours. The system auto-generates work orders, sends notifications, and tracks completion — without manual intervention every cycle.
Track compliance and optimize over time
PM compliance rate — the percentage of scheduled PMs completed on time — is your most important leading indicator. Use your CMMS to track it weekly. When compliance drops, investigate why. When MTBF data shows you’re doing PM too early or too late, adjust the interval. The schedule should evolve with your data.
Preventive Maintenance KPIs: What to Measure
PM completion is the most commonly tracked maintenance KPI, used by 56% of facilities according to Plant Engineering (2025). But PM completion alone doesn’t tell you whether your program is working. Here are the six metrics that together give a complete picture.
PM Compliance Rate
Percentage of scheduled PMs completed on time. Target: 90%+ for world-class programs. The most direct measure of whether your PM schedule is executable.
Mean Time Between Failures
Average time an asset runs between unplanned failures. Rising MTBF means your PM program is working. Declining MTBF is an early warning your intervals are wrong.
Mean Time To Repair
Average time from failure detection to asset return to service. Lower MTTR shows your team has parts, skills, and procedures ready. A good PM program reduces MTTR because you catch issues while they’re still small.
Planned Maintenance Percentage
Ratio of planned work to total maintenance work. World-class facilities run 85–90% planned. If you’re below 70%, you’re still in reactive mode regardless of your PM schedule.
Overall Equipment Effectiveness
Composite measure of availability, performance, and quality. World-class OEE is 85%. PM programs directly improve the availability component by reducing unplanned downtime events.
Maintenance Cost as % of Asset Value
Total maintenance spend divided by total asset replacement value. Typical target: 2–5%. Too high suggests over-maintenance or aging assets. Too low suggests deferred maintenance building up as risk.
How CMMS Software Automates Preventive Maintenance
Managing a PM program manually — spreadsheets, shared calendars, paper checklists — works until it doesn’t. When you have hundreds of assets across multiple locations, manual PM tracking breaks down fast. A CMMS software for preventive maintenance automates the entire loop.
Automated PM scheduling
Set a PM trigger once — time interval, meter reading, or condition threshold — and the system generates work orders automatically every cycle, forever. No manual reminder needed. No PM slips through because someone forgot.
Mobile work order delivery
Technicians receive PM work orders on iOS or Android. Checklists, asset history, part requirements, and procedure documents are all attached. They complete, sign off, and close — all from the floor without paperwork.
Meter-based PM triggers
Connect meter readings directly to PM schedules. When a machine hits 500 hours, 10,000 cycles, or 3,000 miles, the work order fires automatically. Eliminates the risk of missing usage-based PMs on variable-duty equipment.
PM compliance tracking
Real-time dashboards show PM compliance rate by asset, by technician, by department, or by location. Overdue PMs surface immediately. Managers can see the backlog before it becomes a breakdown.
Digital checklists and procedures
Every PM work order carries its specific checklist with required measurements, pass/fail criteria, and photo capture fields. Results are stored in the asset’s permanent history — searchable, auditable, and available to future technicians.
Parts auto-reservation
When a PM work order is generated, required parts are automatically reserved from inventory. Low-stock alerts fire before you run out. No more PM delays because a $12 filter wasn’t in the storeroom.
Return on investment documented for well-run predictive and preventive maintenance programs. Every dollar invested in a structured PM program saves an estimated $4–5 in future repair costs — making PM automation through CMMS one of the highest-return investments in operations.
Preventive Maintenance Checklist: What to Include
A PM checklist is the documented procedure for a specific maintenance task on a specific asset. Good checklists capture institutional knowledge, ensure consistency across technicians, and create a verifiable record. Here’s what every PM checklist should contain.
Asset identification
- Asset ID and name
- Location and sub-location
- Make, model, serial number
- Last service date and technician
Safety requirements
- Required PPE (gloves, eyewear, etc.)
- Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) procedure
- Energy isolation confirmation
- Confined space or hot work permits if applicable
Required parts and tools
- Parts list with part numbers
- Quantities needed per PM cycle
- Special tools or equipment required
- Estimated labor hours
Inspection tasks with measurements
- Each task listed as a discrete step
- Measurement fields (vibration, temperature, pressure, etc.)
- Acceptable range / pass-fail threshold for each
- Space for technician notes
Servicing tasks
- Lubrication points and lubricant type/quantity
- Filter replacements with part numbers
- Belt tension or alignment specs
- Calibration procedures and tolerance ranges
Completion and sign-off
- Overall pass/fail status
- Issues found during inspection
- Follow-up work orders created (if any)
- Technician signature and timestamp
eWorkOrders stores maintenance checklists directly on PM work orders, with digital sign-off and automatic time-stamping. For industry-specific examples, see the eWorkOrders maintenance checklist library →
Preventive Maintenance Across Industries
The PM fundamentals are universal. The specific tasks, compliance requirements, and critical assets vary significantly by sector. eWorkOrders is configured for PM workflows across every major industry.
🏭 Manufacturing
CNC machines, conveyors, hydraulic presses, compressors. PM focused on preventing production line stoppages. OEE tracking and shift-aware scheduling essential. Downtime can reach $2M/hour in automotive manufacturing (Siemens 2024).
🏢 Facilities Management
HVAC, electrical, plumbing, elevators, fire suppression across commercial buildings. Heavy regulatory compliance component — OSHA, building codes, fire safety inspections. Multi-site visibility critical for portfolio managers.
🏥 Healthcare
Biomedical equipment, HVAC, sterilization systems, emergency power. Joint Commission and FDA compliance requirements make audit-ready PM documentation non-negotiable. Patient safety depends on PM execution.
🍽️ Food & Beverage
Processing equipment, refrigeration, packaging lines. PM must prevent both equipment failure and food safety violations. FDA, FSMA, and HACCP compliance integrated into PM checklists.
🚛 Fleet Maintenance
Usage-based PM driven by mileage, engine hours, and fuel consumption. DOT compliance inspections. eWorkOrders meter readings trigger work orders automatically when vehicles hit service thresholds.
💧 Water & Utilities
Pumps, motors, valves, treatment systems. EPA and state regulatory compliance. Failure consequences affect public safety, making PM compliance rates and documented inspections mission-critical.
Preventive Maintenance: Complete Resource Hub
These guides go deeper on specific aspects of preventive maintenance management. Each is a standalone resource linked back to this pillar.
Types of Preventive Maintenance
Deep dive into TBM, UBM, CBM, and PdM — when to use each, how to choose for specific assets, and how to build a hybrid program.
PM Checklist Templates
Downloadable checklist templates for HVAC, electrical, mechanical, and fleet maintenance — organized by equipment type and industry.
PM Scheduling Software
How eWorkOrders automates PM scheduling — time-based, meter-based, and condition-triggered — with work order automation and mobile completion.
Preventive vs. Reactive Maintenance
The full cost comparison between reactive and preventive approaches, with ROI calculations and the business case for making the shift.
Work Order Management
PM generates work orders — here’s how to manage them efficiently. Creation, assignment, tracking, and reporting for the full work order lifecycle.
Asset Management with CMMS
PM history lives on the asset record. Learn how asset lifecycle management, failure history, and MTBF data make PM scheduling smarter over time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Automate Your Preventive Maintenance Program with eWorkOrders
eWorkOrders CMMS automates PM scheduling, work order generation, checklist delivery, compliance tracking, and KPI reporting — for every asset, every site, every shift. Rated 4.9 stars on Capterra. Setup in 24 hours.