
Key takeaways
Short answer: Planned downtime is on the schedule — known in advance, prepared for, recovery is fast. Unplanned downtime happens without warning — breakdowns, material starvation, surprise issues. The planned/unplanned ratio is one of the most telling indicators of maintenance maturity. Mature plants run 80%+ planned; firefighting plants run 30% or less. OEE separates them so the ratio is visible. See also Downtime Reason Code Design.
Planned downtime is a scheduled stop. Examples:
The defining feature is foreknowledge. Everyone knew it was coming. Resources are prepared. Recovery is predictable.
Unplanned downtime is an unscheduled stop. Examples:
The defining feature is surprise. Resources are not pre-positioned. Recovery is reactive.
OEE separates them in the time-state model:
Definitions vary by plant. The important thing is consistency — same definition every shift, every line.
The ratio of planned downtime to total downtime tells a clear maturity story:
Moving the ratio from 30% to 80% planned over 12-24 months is the single highest-leverage maintenance program. It does not require new equipment; it requires PM discipline and reliability engineering.
When OEE reporting incentivizes high Availability, there is a temptation to:
This flatters the number while destroying the maturity signal. The ratio becomes useless.
An hour of unplanned downtime usually costs more than an hour of planned downtime because:
Trading planned downtime for unplanned (deferring PMs) usually loses on net. The math favors planned.
1. Treating all downtime as one number. Loses the maturity signal.
2. Excluding planned downtime from reporting. Plant looks better than it is. Cannot improve what is invisible.
3. Misclassifying unplanned as planned. Flatters the metric and corrupts the analytics.
4. Deferring PMs to "save" downtime. Trades a planned hour for two unplanned hours later.
A modern OEE platform tags every downtime event as planned or unplanned, with reason codes for both, and reports the ratio per line, per shift, per asset. The ratio is trendable so the maturity arc is visible.
Fabrico's OEE module separates planned and unplanned downtime explicitly with reason codes for each, reports the ratio with trend, and ties unplanned events to CMMS work orders for root-cause follow-up.
See how Fabrico captures this automatically — explore OEE for manufacturing or book a demo.
Planned if it was on the schedule. The overrun (if it exceeded the planned time) is sometimes tracked separately as unplanned.
No. Planned breaks (lunch, shift change) are typically excluded from planned production time and do not affect OEE.
The planned portion is planned. The overrun is unplanned. Tracking them separately preserves the maturity signal.
80%+ planned for mature operations. Most plants start much lower and improve over years.
Both. Less total is the goal; more planned within total is the maturity arc. They typically move together as reliability improves.
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