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Wrench Time: The Maintenance Productivity Metric That Matters

Wrench Time: The Maintenance Productivity Metric That Matters

Wrench time measures the share of a technician's day spent actually doing maintenance versus waiting, traveling, and finding parts. Why it is low and how to raise it.
Wrench Time: The Maintenance Productivity Metric That Matters

Key takeaways

  • Wrench time is the share of a technician's paid hours spent actually doing maintenance, as opposed to traveling, waiting, finding parts, or hunting for information.
  • It is usually far lower than managers expect, frequently well under half the day. The hands-on work is rarely the constraint; the support around it is.
  • That reframes the staffing question. Low wrench time means you probably do not need more technicians, you need to remove the waiting and hunting that eats their time.
  • The levers are planning and scheduling, parts kitting, and putting asset information and work orders in the technician's hand, not pushing people to work faster.

What wrench time is

Wrench time is the fraction of a maintenance technician's available time spent with tools in hand on the actual task. Everything else, the travel to the asset, waiting for a permit or a machine to be freed, walking to the store for a part, searching for the manual or the work history, counts against it.

When plants measure it honestly, the number is often sobering: a large share of a skilled, expensive technician's day goes to everything except the repair. The work itself is a minority of the shift.

Where the time actually goes

  • Travel: moving between the shop, the store, and scattered assets.
  • Waiting: for the machine to be released, for a permit, for another trade.
  • Parts: finding out whether a part is in stock, then going to get it.
  • Information: hunting for the manual, the asset history, or what the last person did. See work order management systems.

None of these are the technician's fault. They are gaps in planning and support.

Why it matters

The instinct when maintenance is behind is to hire more technicians. But if wrench time is low, you are buying more expensive hours that will also be spent waiting and walking. Raising wrench time from a third to half the day is the equivalent of adding head count without the cost, by converting time already paid for into productive work. It is one of the highest-leverage maintenance KPIs precisely because the waste is invisible until measured.

How to raise it

  • Plan and schedule work. A planned job with parts, tools, and access arranged in advance removes most of the waiting before the technician starts.
  • Kit the parts. Stage everything a job needs together; see spare parts inventory management.
  • Put information in hand. Mobile access to the work order, asset history, and manuals removes the hunt.
  • Batch by location. Sequencing jobs to cut travel between assets reclaims real time.

Common mistakes

  • Measuring to blame. Technicians do not control most of what lowers wrench time. Using the metric to push people, rather than fix the support, destroys trust and changes nothing.
  • Hiring before fixing. Adding head count to a low-wrench-time team just adds more waiting.
  • Chasing 100%. Some travel and coordination is unavoidable. The aim is to remove waste, not to eliminate every non-wrench minute.

How Fabrico fits

A large slice of lost wrench time is the hunt for information and the back-and-forth on parts. Fabrico gives the technician the work order with the asset's history, the likely cause, and the parts context in one place, so the job starts informed instead of with a walk to find out what happened. Because maintenance and the OEE event that triggered it share one platform, the technician arrives knowing what the machine was doing when it stopped. Fabrico is built and hosted in the EU with data residency in mind and is ISO 27001 certified. To cut the hunting out of your technicians' day, book a demo.

Related reading

For a practical next step, compare the leading options in our guide to the affordable CMMS software.

Teams putting this into practice often review our roundup of the maintenance management software.

Frequently asked questions

What is wrench time?

The proportion of a maintenance technician's paid time spent actually performing maintenance, hands on the task, rather than traveling, waiting, sourcing parts, or searching for information. It is a measure of how well the work is supported, not how hard the technician works.

Why is wrench time usually so low?

Because most of the lost time is structural: travel between assets and the store, waiting for access or permits, finding parts, and hunting for manuals and history. These are planning and support gaps, not effort problems.

How do we improve wrench time?

Plan and schedule jobs so parts, tools, and access are arranged before the technician starts; kit parts; provide mobile access to work orders and asset history; and sequence jobs to cut travel. The gains come from removing waiting, not from working faster.

Should we hire more technicians if maintenance is behind?

Check wrench time first. If it is low, more technicians will also spend much of their time waiting and walking. Raising wrench time converts hours you already pay for into productive work, often a cheaper fix than head count.

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