Ship Planned Maintenance Records and Audit Readiness

Tablet and notebook for ship planned maintenance

Records: The Backbone of Audit Readiness

A Planned Maintenance System (PMS) is only as strong as its documentation. On the bridge and in the engine room, jobs get done by people—but in an inspection, jobs “exist” because the record proves they were planned, performed, verified, and filed. Organized evidence cuts inspection time, prevents non-conformities (NCs), and signals that your ship runs on discipline, not improvisation.

Why PMS Records Matter

Regulatory and Practical Foundations

  • ISM Code Section 10 anchors the requirement to plan and perform maintenance of ship and equipment. Your PMS records are the heartbeat that shows that planning and performance are real.
  • Class and Flag surveyors expect traceable records that connect tasks to evidence—especially where statutory systems are concerned.
  • Vetting, RightShip, and PSC teams use your records to judge control, culture, and competence in minutes. If your records are inspection-ready, so are you.

The “Record Chain” Concept

Think of each maintenance item as a chain that must be unbroken:

Task → Job Card → Evidence (photos, certificates, measurements) → Verification (sign-off) → Retention (indexed, retrievable).

If an inspector can follow that chain without friction, you’re audit-ready. If a link is missing (e.g., no signature, wrong folder, or an expired certificate), expect questions and potential NCs.

What to Record — and What Inspectors Expect

Core PMS Record Types

Record TypeExample ContentsRequired By
Job CardsDescription, date, signaturesISM / Class
Permits / LOTOIsolation, risk controls, referencesISM / Safety
Calibration CertificatesInstrument ID, range, validity, issuerClass
Photos / VideosBefore/after proof, gauges, tagsVetting
Verification Sign-offChecker and approver, date, remarksISM

Quality Criteria for Records

  • Legible entries (typed or clearly written); no ambiguous corrections.
  • Date and signature (or secure digital equivalent) for both performer and verifier.
  • Consistent naming and equipment tags that match your PMS and onboard nameplates.
  • Stored and backed up correctly, with version control and an index your crew actually use.

How to Organize PMS Records

Folder Structure (Digital or Physical)

Adopt a structure your crew can memorize and your inspector can navigate on their own. 

Example:

/PMS/

├── Main_Engine/

├── Generators/

├── Deck_Machinery/

├── LSA_FFA/

├── Pollution_Prevention/

└── Calibration_Records/

  • Keep each record type in subfolders by date or job number (e.g., /Main_Engine/2025-05-22_ME12k_Overhaul/).
  • Mirror digital and physical binders where needed (e.g., “Certificates” and “Critical Equipment Tests”).
  • Maintain a front-page index (“Read Me First”) that explains the map in one screen or one sheet.

Naming Conventions

Make filenames carry the story:

File Name ExampleMeaning
ME_Overhaul_12000hr_2025-05-22.pdfMain Engine overhaul at 12k hours
FFA_CO2Test_2025-07-10.jpgPhoto evidence of CO₂ system test

Pattern: Equipment_Task_Date (optional _Interval or _JobNo).
Examples: GEN2_BearingCheck_2025-09-01.pdf, OWS_FunctionTest_2025-06-15_JC-073.docx.

Tips:

  • Use ISO date (YYYY-MM-DD) for sorting.
  • Avoid spaces; use _ or -.
  • Keep equipment tags identical to what’s on nameplates and in PMS.

Effective ship planned maintenance ensures that all tasks are documented correctly and are easily accessible for audits.

Record Retention and Traceability

Set retention by policy, but align to ISM & Class expectations:

  • Standard guidance: keep 3–5 years of PMS records onboard and/or in accessible shore archives.
  • Retain key certificates (e.g., CO₂ system tests, statutory equipment certificates) per Class/Flag—often until superseded plus policy-defined years.
  • Use digital backups and cloud sync for multi-ship fleets; ensure offline copies for at-sea inspections.
  • Ensure every certificate or photo traces back to a PMS task ID or job card number.

Pre-Inspection Routine — From T-14 Days to T-1

14 Days Before Inspection

  • Overdues & Backlog: Pull PMS overdue list; plan clearance or documented deferrals with risk assessment.
  • Critical Systems Sweep: Confirm record completeness for Main Engine, Generators, LSA/FFA, OWS/Polution Prevention, Navigation, and Steering Gear.
  • Calibrations: Reprint or renew calibration certificates nearing expiry; confirm instrument IDs match job cards.
  • Verify Cross-References: Ensure tasks link to evidence (job number ↔ folder ↔ filename).

7 Days Before Inspection

  • Reorganize & Compile: Tidy folder order; prepare summary lists (e.g., “Last 12 months of LSA/FFA tests”).
  • Signatures & Dates: Check for any missing sign-offs; secure digital signatures if policy allows.
  • Evidence Index Sheet: Prepare a one-page index mapping systems → tasks → evidence (filenames/locations).
  • Spot-Check Reality: Randomly choose 5 tasks and physically verify the equipment condition matches the records.

1 Day Before Inspection

  • Onboard Mini-Audit: Run a quick walkthrough with department heads.
  • Final Sync: Load a read-only USB or tablet binder copy; ensure search works offline.
  • Brief the Team: Who speaks to what: assign “record owners” for ME/GEN/LSA/OWS etc.

Verification and Approval Practices

  • Who verifies? Typically the Chief Engineer (engine tasks) and Master (shipwide records) verify onboard; the Technical Superintendent performs shore-side oversight and periodic sampling.
  • How to sign?
    • Manual: Performer signs job card; verifier initials/date in a dedicated sign-off section.
    • Digital: Use secure role-based accounts, time-stamped approvals, and immutable logs.
  • Close the loop: Verification should trigger correction (if needed), action tracking (CAR), and final filing in the correct folder with the correct filename.
  • Tooling: Use a “Verification Stamp” (physical stamp or digital checkbox) stating Checked by / Date / Remarks / Follow-up Required (Y/N).

Common Record-Keeping Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

Common MistakeResultHow to Prevent
Missing signaturesNC for lack of verificationInclude sign-off line in every job card; weekly check
Wrong folder locationDelays, suspicion of disorderStandardize naming + use a master index
Duplicate or outdated filesConfusion, audit flagsMonthly clean-up and version control
No backupData loss riskSync with shore; maintain offline copies

Audit Readiness Toolkit

A. Checklist (Daily / Weekly / Monthly)

  • Daily:
    • Sign off completed jobs in PMS; attach photos immediately.
    • Verify critical alarms and rounds entries are filed.
  • Weekly:
    • Sample-check 5 recent tasks for complete chains (task → evidence → sign-off).
    • Confirm calibration certificate validity on any instrument used that week.
    • Update Evidence Index Sheet.
  • Monthly:
    • Run duplicate/outdated file cleanup.
    • Test restore from backup (prove retrievability).
    • Review retention list: move superseded docs to archive per policy.

B. Scorecard (0–5 scale per item; target ≥4.0 overall)

  • Completeness (all mandatory fields present)
  • Accuracy (correct equipment tags, dates, instrument IDs)
  • Timeliness (evidence uploaded within 24h of task completion)
  • Traceability (task ↔ file naming aligns; index updated)
  • Verification Quality (sign-off present, remarks meaningful)
  • Backups & Access (redundancy, offline access tested)

C. Lessons Learned Log
Capture post-inspection findings and fixes so they stick.

Sample line:

DateFindingCorrective ActionVerified ByStatus
2025-10-04ME lube filter change lacked verifier sign-offAdded verifier line to job card; toolbox talk heldC/E M. SantosClosed

Ship planned maintenance records are essential for demonstrating compliance during inspections.

Summary — Making PMS Records Inspection-Proof

Boil it down to five pillars your team can repeat from memory:

  1. Clear folder structure everyone understands.
  2. Consistent naming convention that tells the story in the filename.
  3. Verified evidence—signatures or secure digital approvals for every task.
  4. Retention policy (3–5 years unless company policy says otherwise), with backups.
  5. Regular pre-inspection checks (T-14 / T-7 / T-1) so surprise visits aren’t scary.

When these five show up in your ship’s daily rhythm, you don’t “prepare” for audits—you’re already ready.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

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