
Key takeaways
Short answer: Maintenance day is the recurring weekly or monthly scheduled time for routine PM work. Plant shutdown is the quarterly or annual deep maintenance event for overhauls and capital work. Different cadence, different scope, different planning depth. Running one like the other wastes both — shutdowns happen too often or maintenance days become unmanageable. See also Maintenance Backlog.
Maintenance day is a recurring window:
Maintenance day handles the steady stream of routine work.
Shutdown is an event:
Shutdown handles the work that cannot be done during operation.
Maintenance day planning:
Shutdown planning:
Confusing the planning depths produces failed shutdowns or overplanned maintenance days.
What goes on a maintenance day:
What does not:
What goes on a shutdown:
What does not:
Scope discipline keeps shutdowns from extending uncontrollably.
But the differences matter:
1. Skipping maintenance day for production. PMs pile up; shutdown becomes overwhelming.
2. Scope creep on shutdown. Routine work added; shutdown extends; production loss climbs.
3. Maintenance day too ambitious. Work scoped beyond the window; spillover into production time.
4. No shutdown plan. Shutdown becomes chaotic; ends late, costs more, misses scope.
Maintenance day: 4-8% of total time typical. Less means PMs slip; more means too much production loss.
Shutdown: 1-3% of total time typical. Industry- and asset-dependent.
Combined, planned maintenance time is usually 5-11% of available time. World-class plants stay near the low end while still hitting PM compliance targets.
1. No maintenance day, only shutdowns. Steady PMs slip; shutdowns get larger.
2. No shutdowns, only maintenance days. Overhauls and capital work never fit; equipment ages without major service.
3. Production overrides both. Eventually equipment fails and forces an unplanned shutdown.
4. Shutdown scope changes mid-event. Critical path explodes; cost overruns; safety incidents.
Maintenance days are Availability loss (planned). Shutdowns are larger Availability loss (planned). Both are correctly classified as planned downtime in OEE.
Plants without disciplined maintenance days see unplanned downtime climb; plants without disciplined shutdowns see major failures eventually.
A modern CMMS supports recurring maintenance day scheduling with PM bundling, and shutdown planning with project management features (critical path, resource leveling, scope tracking).
Fabrico's CMMS supports recurring maintenance day scheduling and shutdown project planning with scope tracking, resource management, and critical path analysis.
See how Fabrico captures this automatically — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.
Weekly to monthly typical. Depends on PM volume and equipment.
Annually for most plants; quarterly for very heavy operations. Some run multi-year campaigns.
Major shutdowns yes. Smaller events 3-6 months minimum.
Reliability or maintenance leadership with operations and engineering supporting.