I manage a small fleet of ten delivery vans for a local business, and I'm trying to implement a more proactive fleet maintenance schedule to reduce unexpected breakdowns and control costs. Currently, we just react when something fails. I'm looking into basic telematics for mileage tracking and setting up a digital log for each vehicle. For other small fleet managers, what key maintenance tasks do you prioritize on a weekly or monthly basis beyond oil changes, and how do you effectively track and budget for larger, predictable repairs like brake jobs or transmission service before they become emergencies?
Nice move. For a 10-van operation, start with a simple weekly walkaround: check brake fluid and lights, tire pressures, belts, and look for leaks; log odometer readings; note any unusual noises. Use telematics to flag high idle, hard braking, and excessive idle time; set sensible thresholds and alert rules. Keep a rolling 90‑day maintenance calendar and a shared log so everyone can see what’s due.
Beyond the usual oil changes, schedule monthly checks that cover the drivetrain and safety basics: brake wear indicators, battery health, coolant/engine oil and transmission fluid levels, belts/hoses, HVAC function, and tire condition. Run audits on a few trucks each month and log results in a central sheet. Let telematics trigger reminders (e.g., if brakes reach a wear threshold or miles since last service exceed a limit).
Establish a simple reserve model for big repairs. Build a maintenance fund based on per‑mile expectations and your own risk tolerance, then forecast 12–18 months ahead with a couple of scenarios (low/average/high usage). Track actual costs against the forecast and adjust quarterly. Pair that with preventive maintenance to avoid big, surprise billings for brakes, transmissions, or suspension work.
Create a standardized maintenance calendar tied to routes and usage. Use event‑driven rules (e.g., service after 5,000 miles or 60 days since last check, whichever comes first). Draft 2–3 checklists (brakes, tires, fluids) and train drivers to perform quick pre/post trip inspections and report issues through the telematics app or a shared form.
Keep a single source of truth for all data: vehicle, VIN, model, service history, parts used, and costs. Track KPIs like downtime per vehicle, maintenance cost per mile, mean time between failures, and parts wear rates. Build relationships with a couple of trusted shops and consider fixed‑price preventive maintenance plans or OEM‑service programs to simplify budgeting and scheduling.
If you want, tell me the make/model mix, typical miles per week, and your telematics platform. I can draft a one‑page weekly schedule and a six‑month budgeting template you can drop into your ops binder.