Why Does Maintenance Fall Through the Cracks in Business Central?
The gap is not a software flaw; it is a scope decision. Business Central is built to manage production, inventory, purchasing, and finance. Maintenance is treated as a capacity absence at best: you can register a work center as unavailable, block off time on a calendar, and bury a note in a comment field. What you cannot do natively is define a recurring inspection interval, track runtime against a machine center, store parts requirements for a specific asset, or give a technician a mobile job card with attached manuals and step-by-step work instructions.
- The result is familiar: maintenance lives in spreadsheets, paper binders, or a standalone CMMS with no connection to the production schedule
- Across U.S. manufacturing alone, unplanned downtime costs an estimated $50 billion annually
- The average large manufacturing operation loses roughly $260,000 for every hour a critical line sits idle
- Business Central's fixed asset register can record equipment existence and track depreciation, but provides no native way to assign maintenance intervals, build service bills of materials, or trigger work orders when a runtime counter hits a threshold
Closing that gap has traditionally required a separate enterprise asset management (EAM) platform, which adds its own integration burden, licensing costs, and a learning curve your millwrights and maintenance technicians have to climb.
How Does Maintenance Manager Solve the Problem?
Maintenance Manager is a maintenance management system (CMMS) that runs natively inside Business Central. Rather than building a parallel data structure, it uses production orders as its foundation for maintenance work orders. That one architectural decision means every existing Business Central capability, including warehouse functions, shop floor execution, planning worksheets, and third-party ISV apps, works with maintenance orders exactly the same way it works with production orders.
How Does Maintenance Manager Work in Practice?
Setup is intentional in its simplicity. An installation wizard applies default data, numbering series, and posting groups, so the system is usable almost immediately.
- Equipment items are created as standard Business Central items with a maintenance designation and can be linked to existing fixed assets or set up independently for tooling, vehicles, or any asset that does not require a fixed asset record
- Each piece of equipment is assigned maintenance tasks with intervals defined by duration (weekly, monthly, annual), runtime (every 500 machine hours), output count (every 100,000 cycles), or distance (every 10,000 miles)
- For production assets linked to work centers or machine centers, runtime and output count updates automatically whenever a production order posts against that resource
- When maintenance is due, the planning worksheet generates work orders complete with bills of materials for spare parts and labor routings
- Those parts become live demand signals in Business Central, so the standard planning run will recommend purchasing them if stock is insufficient
- When a work order is released for a production asset, that capacity is consumed in the schedule
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