Maintenance Costs: How to Manage and Minimize Them (2024)

The right way to think about maintenance costs

Many business owners have the wrong mindset when it comes to maintenance. They only see the department as a cost center, a business unit that doesn’t contribute strategic value. This leads them to pressure maintenance directors and managers to reduce total maintenance costs at all costs.

A more effective mindset views maintenance as an investment. By performing maintenance work you are not just spending money, you are investing in the long-term value of your equipment. You are spending money to increase the performance and useful life of your assets, to reduce production delays, and more.

Maintenance professionals will always need to work with a budget in mind. To have any chance at successfully managing maintenance expenditures, they need to understand which factors contribute to their maintenance bills and think strategically about using this budget effectively.

How do you calculate maintenance costs?

The real cost of an asset goes far beyond its purchase price. When a department is buying a new piece of equipment, it should also take into account ongoing maintenance and repair costs. The average cost of ongoing maintenance can significantly differ from one asset to another. How much regular maintenance it needs, how it handles wear and tear, and the cost of spare parts are just some of the factors that will impact annual maintenance costs for a given asset.

Those kinds of budgeting decisions are often left to maintenance directors and managers. At the end of the year, business owners will often focus on reviewing total costs, which are often represented as the total MRO (maintenance, repair, operations) costs on balance sheets.

The MRO cost can be broken down into labor costs, spare parts and materials, maintenance vendors, energy costs, and overhead expenses. Effectively tracking costs for each of those categories is key for reducing future maintenance costs.

Maintenance Costs: How to Manage and Minimize Them (1)Some of the factors that go into calculating maintenance expenses.

One important thing that often gets left out of this conversation is the indirect cost of lost productivity. During most maintenance activities, the asset has to be shut down. If scheduled maintenance or an unexpected repair happens during regular business hours, it will result in lost production hours – which means lost profit. Will the company lose hundreds or millions of dollars depends on how critical is the affected asset for business operations and the total length of equipment downtime.

Tracking maintenance expenses with Limble CMMS

One of the easiest ways to measure total maintenance costs is to use a CMMS software. The alternative is to spend hours digging through excel sheets, invoices, and old work orders whenever you have to create a report.

Tracking overall maintenance cost

To effectively manage maintenance costs, you need accurate data and the ability to break down costs into categories like parts and assets. This allows you to find and eliminate problem areas.

In Limble, total maintenance costs are broken down into three main categories:

  1. Money spent on parts
  2. Money spent on labor
  3. Money spent on outside vendors

This level of analysis is great for keeping an eye on overall maintenance costs. More granular reporting is necessary for pinpointing and executing on opportunities for improvement.

Tracking down expenses for a single asset

Vendor invoices are tied to assets. Spare parts are used on assets. Labor costs are incurred by performing maintenance work on assets. While a CMMS might allow you to break down costs based on types of invoices, types of spare parts, and type of performed work, the most useful reports will be those that look at specific assets.

Calculating an asset’s TCO without a CMMS

Imagine the world without a CMMS. To determine the total cost of ownership for an asset you would have to dig through digital files and paperwork to learn how much maintenance work has been performed on the asset and which spare parts have been used.

When you find that information, you have to hope it is accurate and that no work orders have been misplaced. After that, you’ll have to search through spreadsheets to find the cost for each spare part you’ve used.

Next, you need to look at who performed maintenance work, for how long, and if some of that work qualified as overtime.

See what you’re missing with Limble

Or you can use a digital solution like Limble and find all of that information with just a couple of clicks.

The easiest way to manage a maintenance budget is to gain in-depth insight into your data. When you know how much your assets cost you and why they break down it becomes much easier to find opportunities to cut costs and eliminate waste.

If you want to give Limble CMMS, you have three options:

  • Start a free 30-day trial
  • Request a demo
  • Try our self demo

More ways to decrease overall maintenance costs

It’s always hard to find new ways to shrink your maintenance budget. Below is an list with some additional ideas for reducing maintenance costs:

  • Use an inventory management solution to accurately forecast inventory needs and decrease spare parts inventory costs
  • Improve the onboarding process for machine operators, so they have less chance of damaging equipment through improper use and they feel committed to a culture of continuous improvement
  • Negotiate with maintenance vendors and spare parts providers
  • Implement lean maintenance practices to reduce all sources of waste
  • Implement an autonomous maintenance program to maximize efficiency and minimize excess costs
  • Invest in condition monitoring technology to monitor asset health and optimize your maintenance schedule
  • Focus on proactive maintenance strategies like preventive maintenance and predictive maintenance

Maintenance costs vs. capital expenditures

For accounting purposes, it is important to distinguish between general maintenance costs and capital expenditures.

In short, regular maintenance costs relate to actions performed on a regular basis to keep assets in their original condition. This includes routine maintenance work, spare parts replacements, and simple repairs.

Capital expenditures are maintenance expenses like major overhauls and upgrades that require significant resource investments. Capital expenditures increase asset value.

The benefits of standard maintenance work last for less than 12 months and go on a profit and loss statement for the current year. In contrast, the benefits of capital expenditures last for more than 12 months. They may depreciate over time.

Sometimes you have to spend money to save money

Investing money in maintenance is often the smartest long-term solution you can make.

Of course, getting approval for such investments is easier said than done. The strongest case you can make to top management is to show the considerable return on investment of implementing a CMMS tool. Here’s a simple guide on how to calculate the ROI of your CMMS platform to help you get started.

Maintenance Costs: How to Manage and Minimize Them (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rubie Ullrich

Last Updated:

Views: 5583

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (52 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rubie Ullrich

Birthday: 1998-02-02

Address: 743 Stoltenberg Center, Genovevaville, NJ 59925-3119

Phone: +2202978377583

Job: Administration Engineer

Hobby: Surfing, Sailing, Listening to music, Web surfing, Kitesurfing, Geocaching, Backpacking

Introduction: My name is Rubie Ullrich, I am a enthusiastic, perfect, tender, vivacious, talented, famous, delightful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.