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Your planned preventive maintenance (PPM) programme is only as good as the last time you properly reviewed it.
For facilities teams, a preventive maintenance audit is one of the highest-leverage things you can do. Done well, it eliminates wasted spend, catches compliance gaps before they become serious, and keeps your assets running longer with fewer emergency callouts. Done poorly or not at all and your PM schedule quietly drifts into inefficiency while your budget absorbs the cost.
There are multiple advantages of managing your preventive maintenance effectively. This guide covers what a preventive maintenance audit actually is, why it matters specifically for facilities teams, and how to run one that produces real results. We've also included a practical checklist you can use straight away.
A preventive maintenance audit is a structured review of your PM programme - its tasks, schedules, documentation, compliance, and outcomes, to determine whether it's working as it should. It's not a routine inspection. Inspections check the condition of your assets. An audit checks the condition of your maintenance programme itself.
Specifically, a PM audit asks:
For facilities teams managing buildings, infrastructure, and equipment across one or more sites, these questions translate directly into operational and financial outcomes.
Industry research consistently shows that many organisations are over-maintaining some assets while under-maintaining others. Analyst estimates suggest that up to 30% of preventive maintenance tasks in a typical programme are performed too frequently relative to the actual risk of failure. For a facilities team already stretched thin, that's meaningful capacity being consumed on low-value work.
Facilities teams face regulatory requirements around fire safety, electrical systems, HVAC, water hygiene (including Legionella), lifts, and more. A PM audit verifies that your maintenance schedules align with statutory and insurance-mandated intervals - and that the documentation to prove it actually exists. Research from the Aberdeen Group indicates that organisations that conduct regular PM audits achieve compliance audit pass rates around 90%, compared to roughly 68% for those that don't.
When assets fail unexpectedly, the cost isn't just repair. It includes downtime, emergency contractor rates, disruption to building occupants, and potential safety incidents. A PM audit identifies the gaps in your programme that are allowing preventable failures to occur.
Manufacturer intervals, legacy assumptions, and previous team preferences all shape a PM schedule. An audit gives you a structured opportunity to test those assumptions against actual asset performance data and update them accordingly.
Most facilities professionals recommend a full audit at least annually, with lighter reviews every six months. In practice, the right frequency depends on:
A good rule of thumb: if your unplanned maintenance is running above 30–40% of total maintenance activity, treat that as a trigger to audit your PM programme regardless of your calendar schedule.
Work through each section. Rate your current state as Good, Needs Improvement, or Not in Place.
What to look for: Missing or incomplete records are both a compliance risk and a sign that maintenance tasks may not be happening as planned.
What to look for: Intervals that haven't been reviewed in 2+ years are likely either too frequent in some areas or too infrequent in others.
Key KPI: PM completion rate = (PMs completed on time ÷ PMs scheduled) × 100. Below 85% is a red flag.
Common facilities examples of critical assets: fire suppression systems, emergency lighting, lifts, main electrical distribution, HVAC serving critical spaces, water systems with Legionella risk.
What to look for: Any lapse in statutory compliance represents direct legal and insurance risk - these should be the first priority in any audit.
What to look for: Repeated delays due to parts availability often indicate a procurement or inventory management gap rather than a scheduling problem.
Key KPI: Planned maintenance as a percentage of total maintenance spend. Industry benchmark is 70–80% planned vs. reactive. A lower ratio suggests insufficient PM activity or poor scheduling.
An audit is only useful if it results in action. Once you've worked through your checklist:
The single biggest obstacle to effective PM auditing is data quality. If your maintenance records are scattered across spreadsheets, paper-based job cards, and email threads, assembling a clear picture of what's been done and what hasn't takes longer than the audit itself.
A modern facilities management platform centralises your work orders, PM schedules, asset records, and compliance documentation in one place. That means your audit becomes a matter of reviewing live data rather than hunting through filing systems and your findings can be acted on within the same system.
If your current tooling makes auditing difficult, that's worth factoring into your action plan.
A preventive maintenance audit isn't about adding more work to an already full schedule. It's about making sure the work you're already doing is the right work, done at the right time, with a clear record that it happened.
For facilities teams, the payoff is straightforward: fewer emergency callouts, better compliance, longer asset life, and a maintenance budget that's being spent where it actually matters.
Run your first audit using the checklist above. You may be surprised what you find.