HVAC preventive maintenance: what you need to know
HVAC preventive maintenance helps reduce unexpected breakdowns, stabilize operating costs, and extend the lifespan of assets.
An effective program is built around 5 key steps:
- Align the strategy with your business objectives
- Plan frequencies based on equipment criticality
- Rely on specialized technical expertise
- Drive performance using data (CMMS, KPI, MTBF)
- Ensure clear communication with teams
In the Québec context—marked by rising energy costs, regulatory requirements (Bill 41, Bill 16), and aging assets—a structured preventive maintenance program becomes a strategic lever, not an expense.
HVAC preventive maintenance: the 5 key steps to a high-performance program
As early as 2018, we were already discussing the importance of moving from corrective (run-to-fail) maintenance to structured preventive maintenance.
In 2026, Québec’s reality is even clearer:
- Rising energy costs
- Increased regulatory pressure (energy performance, ESG, Bill 41, Bill 16)
- Scarcity of specialized labor
- Aging assets in commercial and industrial buildings
- New smart building trends
Despite this, many organizations still operate in reactive mode.
For a building manager or operations director, this approach is costly: unexpected breakdowns, production shutdowns, occupant discomfort, and energy overconsumption.
Here is how to structure an effective HVAC preventive maintenance program tailored to Québec’s climate and regulatory realities.
Step 1. Design a program aligned with your business objectives
To build an effective maintenance plan, start with a simple question: what business outcomes are you looking to achieve?
A well-structured preventive maintenance program should aim to:
- Reduce unplanned production shutdowns
- Lower emergency and parts costs
- Optimize labor hours
- Limit operational disruptions
- Maximize equipment performance
- Improve operational quality
- Extend asset lifespan
The most effective procedures are developed by professionals who understand OEM recommendations and real-world conditions.
A turnkey program must be based on:
- Equipment performance history
- Operating environment (load, climate, usage)
- Asset age
- Critical mechanical and electrical components
- Power fluctuations and energy constraints
- Operational human risks
Critical HVAC equipment to include in your plan
Your program should at minimum cover:
- Heating systems
- Mechanical ventilation
- Air conditioning
- Building mechanical systems
- Control systems (building automation, BACnet)
A thorough root-cause failure analysis is essential. Without this rigor, critical inspections may be overlooked, weakening the entire program.
Each procedure must clearly define safe work methods and expected maintenance standards to ensure consistency and reliability.
“Too often, maintenance is seen as a purely technical obligation. In reality, it should be approached as a strategic operational function. The first question we need to ask is: which critical activities cannot afford to be disrupted? When an HVAC maintenance program is built around this thinking, it becomes a concrete driver of operational performance, cost optimization, and equipment longevity.” Jean-François Beauchamp – Director of Operations
Step 2. Plan maintenance frequencies intelligently
Once procedures are integrated into your maintenance management system (CMMS), they must be scheduled at the appropriate frequency: daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, or annual.
Not all equipment requires frequent inspections, but most require at least monthly to annual follow-ups.
A well-structured program helps reduce non-productive time, eliminate duplication, and optimize maintenance resources.
Planning criteria
| Analysis criterion | Why it is strategic | Impact on frequency |
| Equipment criticality | Assesses the impact of a failure on operations (production, comfort, compliance). | The more critical the equipment, the more frequent the inspections. |
| Performance history | Analysis of past failures, energy drift, recurring costs. | Dynamic adjustment of maintenance intervals. |
| Seasonal load | Load variations in winter/summer (heating, cooling). | Increased inspections before peak periods. |
| Operational impact | Potential production or occupancy shutdown. | Prioritization of strategic assets. |
Recommended maintenance frequencies
| Frequency | Type of intervention | Primary objective |
| Monthly | Inspection of critical components | Early detection of anomalies |
| Quarterly | Mechanical and electrical adjustments | Performance stabilization |
| Semi-annual | Major inspections | Prevention of seasonal failures |
| Annual | Full service, cleaning, and calibration | Energy optimization and extended equipment lifespan |
A poorly configured program leads to:
- Over-maintenance (unnecessary costs)
- Under-maintenance (breakdown risk)
Our teams use computerized maintenance management systems (CMMS) and field data to optimize maintenance frequencies and reduce unproductive downtime.
“The real question is not how often you maintain your equipment, but which critical operations you choose to safeguard. When preventive maintenance is aligned with your operational priorities, it stops being an expense and becomes a driver of stability, energy efficiency, and sustainable asset performance.” Jean-François Beauchamp – Director of Operations
Discover our HVAC maintenance approach.
Step 3. Invest in training and technical expertise
Training in preventive maintenance is decisive. It allows teams to detect minor anomalies before they become major failures.
Without proper expertise, risks increase significantly: emergency costs, production losses, and internal pressure.
The difference between a simple inspection and true prevention lies in expertise.
Detecting:
- Abnormal pump vibration
- Temperature drift in a chiller
- Efficiency loss in a boiler
- Incorrect control sequence in building automation
Requires trained professionals:
- Mechanical engineers
- Refrigeration technicians
- Control technicians
- Building automation specialists
- Stationary plant mechanics
An integrated approach prevents minor symptoms from turning into major shutdowns.
Step 4. Implement a data-driven management plan
In 2026, preventive maintenance goes far beyond a paper checklist.
With a structured work-order system tracking labor hours, materials, and root causes, you can measure:
- Number of work orders per asset
- Corrective vs preventive interventions
- Cost per equipment
- Mean time between failures (MTBF)
- Energy consumption before/after optimization
Thanks to building automation and data analytics, it is possible to:
- Identify energy drift
- Adjust control sequences
- Reduce peak demand
- Stabilize mechanical loads
Step 5. Communicate to ensure internal alignment
Even the best preventive maintenance program will fail without team buy-in.
Clear communication is essential:
- Who is responsible?
- When will interventions take place?
- Which performance indicators are being tracked?
The program must be presented as evolving, focused on continuous improvement and real gains: fewer emergencies, less pressure, greater operational stability.
Failure factors vs management best practices
| Program failure risks | Operational consequences | Key role of the manager |
| Teams do not understand priorities | Misaligned interventions, loss of efficiency | Clarify priorities and critical assets |
| Objectives are not aligned | Confusion between performance, budget, and energy goals | Align maintenance, operations, and leadership |
| KPIs are not tracked | Impossible to measure gains or performance drift | Implement measurable and monitored indicators |
Strategic communication to implement
| Element to communicate | Why it is essential | Impact on performance |
| Who does what | Prevents gray areas and duplication | Clear accountability |
| When interventions will occur | Reduces unexpected disruptions | Improved operational planning |
| What performance indicators are tracked | Provides clear direction to teams | Data-driven management |
| What gains are achieved | Recognizes efforts and motivates teams | Sustainable continuous improvement |
Maintenance must be perceived as a strategic investment — not an expense.
About Jean-François

Jean-François is Director of Operations with over 20 years of experience in the HVAC industry. Having held several key roles, he has developed strong expertise in both field operations and strategic planning. Holding an MBA, he brings a balanced perspective to industry challenges, supporting efficient operations and contributing to the organization’s long-term stability and growth.
About BAULNE
BAULNE – A local company, leader in building mechanics.
For over 20 years, BAULNE has been simplifying HVAC management for business clients through intelligent solutions that reduce operating costs while improving comfort and productivity.
Our motto:Caring for people and buildings
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