Electrical System Maintenance Checklist

Periodic electrical maintenance walk for property management — covers life-safety inspection, lighting, GFCI/AFCI outlets, panels, motors, and HVAC electrical, with conditional follow-up to a licensed electrician for any flagged failures.

7 sections 21 steps Collects data
1

General Safety Inspection

  1. Walk the property for exposed wiring and burn marks
    • Walk common areas, mechanical rooms, basements, and any tenant-accessible utility closets. Look for missing junction-box covers, scorching or discoloration around outlets, knob-and-tube remnants in older buildings, and abandoned wiring left from prior renovations. Photograph anything questionable for the maintenance log.

  2. Verify panel and breaker labeling
    • NEC 408.4 requires every circuit to be legibly identified at the panel. Update any directories that reference former tenants, removed equipment, or generic labels like 'lights.' First responders rely on these during an emergency shutoff.

  3. Flag overloaded circuits and daisy-chained extension cords
    • Common in leasing offices, package rooms, and amenity spaces — power strips feeding power strips, space heaters on shared circuits, mini-fridges sharing a 15A circuit with copiers. Note locations and add a permanent-receptacle work order rather than just unplugging the cord.

2

Lighting Systems

  1. Inspect fixtures and replace failed lamps
    • Check parking-lot, breezeway, stairwell, and amenity-area lighting first — these are the dark-spot complaints tenants and insurance auditors flag. Match lamp wattage and color temperature to the existing fixture; a 5000K bulb in an otherwise 3000K corridor is a maintenance giveaway.

  2. Clean lenses, diffusers, and exterior fixtures
    • Dust and insect debris cut lumen output by 20-30% on exterior fixtures. Clear out wasp nests in wall-pack housings before they short the photocell.

  3. Test emergency and exit lighting per NFPA 101
    • NFPA 101 requires a 30-second functional test monthly and a 90-minute full-discharge test annually. Press the test button on each unit, time the run, and log results — fire marshals ask for the log during inspections, and missing it is a common citation.

3

Outlets, GFCI, and Switches

  1. Test every GFCI and AFCI outlet
    • Press the TEST button on every kitchen, bathroom, laundry, garage, and exterior receptacle, plus pool/spa equipment GFCIs. The button should trip the outlet and cut power; if it doesn't, the device is dead — UL-listed GFCIs lose protection long before they stop passing current. Newer NEC cycles require AFCI in bedrooms and living areas; test these too.

    Collects list
  2. Inspect outlets for wear, scorching, or loose plugs
    • Plugs that fall out, brown haloing on the faceplate, or warm-to-the-touch outlets are pre-failure signs of arcing. Replace the device — don't just retape it. Outlets in tenant kitchens behind heavy appliances are the highest-risk spot.

  3. Confirm covers and switch plates are intact
    • Cracked or missing plates expose live conductors and are an instant habitability defect. Carry a stock of standard-color plates on the maintenance cart.

4

Electrical Panels and Distribution

  1. Verify NEC 110.26 working clearance at panels
    • NEC 110.26 requires 36 inches of clear depth and a 30-inch wide working space in front of every panel. Storage that creeps in front of the breaker box is the #1 panel-room finding from insurance loss-control inspectors. Clear it on the spot.

  2. Thermal-scan panels for hot connections
    • Run a thermal camera or IR thermometer across each breaker, bus tie, and lug. A connection that's 15-20°F hotter than its neighbors is loose or corroded — a precursor to arcing. Do this under load (mid-day, mid-week) so the scan is meaningful.

    Collects list
  3. Test breakers and replace failed units
    • Cycle each breaker off and back on under no load. A breaker that won't reset, feels gritty, or trips immediately on reload is dead. Federal Pacific Stab-Lok and Zinsco panels deserve special attention — both have documented failure-to-trip histories and most insurers now require replacement.

5

Motors and Pumps

  1. Lubricate bearings and check belt tension
    • Cooling-tower fans, booster pumps, sump pumps, and exhaust-fan motors. Use the manufacturer-specified grease — mixing lithium and polyurea greases breaks down the lubricant. Belts should deflect about 1/2 inch at midspan; replace any that are glazed or cracked.

  2. Measure motor current and voltage balance
    • Clamp meter on each leg of three-phase motors. Voltage imbalance over 2% or current imbalance over 10% kills motor windings. Record readings against last cycle to spot trending failures before a midnight pump-out.

    Collects paragraph
  3. Inspect pump seals and listen for vibration
    • Wet floors near booster or domestic-water pumps mean a failing mechanical seal. Cavitation rumble and bearing whine both indicate near-term failure — get an emergency vendor lined up before the unit drops.

6

HVAC Electrical Systems

  1. Inspect contactors, relays, and starters for pitting
    • Pulled-in contactors with pitted, blackened, or welded contacts are the single most common cause of summertime AC no-cool calls. Replace at first signs of pitting — a $25 contactor prevents a $300 emergency dispatch and a 24-hour habitability complaint.

  2. Torque-check HVAC electrical connections
    • Disconnect-switch lugs, condenser-fan terminals, and air-handler control-board screws all loosen with thermal cycling. Use the manufacturer's torque spec — overtightening fractures aluminum lugs as readily as undertightening loosens them.

  3. Calibrate thermostats against a reference
    • A drifted stat that reads 4°F low costs an owner real money on a sunbelt cooling bill — and produces 'my unit's always cold' tickets. Compare against a calibrated reference thermometer and replace batteries on any non-hardwired stat at the same time.

7

Findings, Documentation, and Sign-Off

  1. Dispatch a licensed electrician for flagged failures
    • Failed GFCI/AFCI devices and panel hot-spots are not in-house repairs — they need a state-licensed electrician with a current COI naming the property as additional insured. Open the work order today; do not let a flagged finding sit until the next cycle.

  2. Compile findings in the maintenance log
    • Attach the panel thermal scan, GFCI test results, motor amp readings, and any photos. Insurance-loss-control auditors and fire marshals both ask for the dated log; an empty file at audit time is itself a finding.

    Collects file
  3. Sign off on the maintenance run
    • Maintenance supervisor reviews the run, confirms any electrician dispatch is open, and signs. The signed record drives the next quarterly cycle's scope and is the document produced for owner reporting.

    Collects list Collects paragraph Collects signature

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Category Property Management
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