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Commercial Generator Maintenance Schedule: Weekly, Monthly, Annual

SGH Engineering Team5 min readUpdated

Quick answer

A commercial standby generator runs on two calendars at once: the NFPA 110 testing calendar and the manufacturer's service calendar. NFPA 110 Chapter 8 sets the floor — a weekly inspection of fuel, oil, coolant, battery and charger; a monthly 30-minute exercise under load at no less than 30% of nameplate kW, including operation of each transfer switch; and an annual load-bank test for diesel units whose monthly load falls short. On top of that, the manufacturer's schedule adds an oil-and-filter change annually or every 100–200 running hours (whichever comes first), plus annual coolant testing, stored-fuel testing, and a battery load test. A good service contract bundles these into scheduled PM visits with documented records and a guaranteed emergency response time. Verify the exact cadence for your occupancy with your AHJ.

Two calendars, one machine

Standby generator maintenance confuses owners because two documents claim the schedule. NFPA 110 Chapter 8 is the code calendar — what the fire marshal or surveyor will ask to see if your generator serves life-safety loads. The manufacturer's O&M manual is the machine calendar — what keeps the engine and alternator inside warranty and actually able to run for days. A working PM program merges them; skipping either one is how a generator passes inspection and still fails in a hurricane.

Here is the merged program most commercial facilities run:

IntervalTaskDriven by
WeeklyWalkaround inspection: fuel, oil, coolant, battery and charger, block heater, switch in AUTO, no alarmsNFPA 110 §8.4.1
Monthly30-minute exercise under load at ≥30% of nameplate kW; operate each ATSNFPA 110 §8.4.2, §8.4.6
AnnuallyOil and filter change (or every 100–200 running hours, whichever first); coolant test; fuel sample test; battery load test; full inspection with thermal scanManufacturer + good practice
AnnuallySupplemental load-bank test — diesel units whose monthly load can't reach 30%NFPA 110 §8.4.2.4
Every 36 monthsLevel 1 systems: 4-hour continuous testNFPA 110 §8.4.9

The weekly walkaround

Fifteen to twenty minutes, and it catches the single most common start failure — a dead battery — before an outage does. Check:

  • Fuel — tank level, no leaks at fittings, day-tank pump operating
  • Oil — level on the dipstick, no fresh drips under the engine
  • Coolant — level in the sight glass, and the block heater warm to the touch: a cold diesel is a slow-starting diesel
  • Battery and charger — charger showing float, terminals clean, electrolyte level where applicable
  • Controls — selector in AUTO (a generator left in OFF after service is a classic failure), no active alarms on the panel
  • Housekeeping — louvers clear, no nests or storage against the enclosure

Log every walkaround. NFPA 110 §8.3.4 requires written records kept available to the AHJ, and after an outage-related loss those records are what stands between you and a negligence claim.

The monthly loaded exercise

The full requirements live in our NFPA 110 testing guide; the short version is 30 continuous minutes under load at no less than 30% of nameplate kW (or the manufacturer's minimum exhaust-gas temperature), plus operating each automatic transfer switch so the sense-start-transfer-retransfer chain gets proven end to end — not just the engine.

The 30% floor is not bureaucracy. Diesels exercised at light load never reach full combustion temperature and accumulate unburned fuel in the exhaust — wet stacking — which is why underloaded units also need the annual load-bank test.

The annual service visit

This is the visit a technician should do, and what a service contract prices. A thorough annual covers:

  • Oil and filters. Annually or on the running-hour interval from the O&M manual — commonly in the 100–200 hour range. A generator that rode through a two-week outage may hit the hour interval mid-year; that service happens then, not at the anniversary.
  • Coolant. Test concentration and corrosion inhibitors; verify hoses, clamps and the radiator core. Cooling failures, not fuel failures, end many long runs.
  • Fuel. Stored diesel degrades — water, microbial growth, sediment. Sample and lab-test annually; polish or treat when the sample fails. See the full picture in our diesel fuel storage guide.
  • Batteries. Load-test, don't just voltage-check. Many operators replace starting batteries on a fixed 2–3 year cycle rather than wait for a failed test.
  • Electrical. Inspect and thermally scan connections at the alternator, breaker and transfer switch; verify charger output and heater operation.
  • Control exercise. Verify alarms, shutdowns and remote annunciation actually annunciate.

The hardware that makes reliability possible

A standby set spends 99% of its life waiting, and three accessories do most of the waiting work. A multi-stage battery charger holds the starting battery at float with temperature compensation so the crank is there at 2 a.m. A thermostatic coolant heater — the screw-in block heaters on Cat® Olympian sets maintain coolant above about 38°C (100°F) — is what lets a diesel start, stabilize and accept load in seconds rather than minutes. An anti-condensation heater keeps the alternator windings dry in humid climates so insulation doesn't degrade while the machine sleeps. If your unit is missing any of these, that's an annual-visit conversation — see the Olympian accessory catalog for the real hardware.

What a service contract should cover

Most owners outsource the monthly-and-annual program. Before signing, check that the agreement includes:

  1. Scheduled PM visits — at minimum the annual service above; better contracts include the monthly loaded exercise with an on-site technician.
  2. NFPA-format records — every visit documented in a log the AHJ will accept.
  3. Load-bank testing — included or priced, if your building load runs under 30%.
  4. Emergency response time — a written hours-to-site commitment, with parts stocking for your model.
  5. Fuel services — annual sampling, polishing, and priority refueling during regional events.
  6. Consumables and exclusions in writing — who pays for oil, coolant, batteries; what voids the deal.

Price varies with size, fuel, and distance from the servicing dealer — get it quoted alongside the machine, because lifetime service typically costs more than the generator itself. Our TCO calculator lets you compare ownership costs across configurations.

Frequently asked questions

How often does a commercial generator need an oil change?

Annually, or every 100–200 running hours — whichever comes first, per the manufacturer's manual for your engine. Extended outages consume the hour interval quickly: plan a mid-outage service window on any multi-day run.

Can my own staff do generator maintenance?

The weekly walkaround and record-keeping — yes, with basic training. The monthly loaded test can be in-house if staff are qualified to operate transfer equipment. Annual service, load-bank tests and anything inside the control cabinet belong with a qualified technician.

What maintenance does a natural gas generator need vs diesel?

The same weekly/monthly/annual skeleton, minus the stored-fuel program — pipeline gas doesn't degrade in a tank. Spark-ignited engines add ignition-system checks and are generally exempt from the supplemental load-bank requirement. See natural gas vs diesel.

What happens if I skip monthly tests?

The machine's failure probability climbs silently — dead batteries, stuck transfer switches, varnished fuel. If the generator serves code-required loads, you're also out of compliance, and missing logs surface in every post-incident investigation.

Build the program around the right machine

A right-sized generator makes the whole program easier — it reaches 30% load naturally and never needs the supplemental load bank. Size yours with the commercial sizing method or the selector wizard, build your test calendar with the NFPA 110 schedule tool, and post your project to have dealers quote machine and service contract together. Testing and maintenance requirements vary by occupancy and edition — verify your facility's exact obligations with your AHJ.

This information is provided for general guidance only. Codes and rules change and vary by jurisdiction — always verify requirements with your Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) and a licensed engineer.

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