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Facilities management is not just about keeping a building presentable. For commercial properties, it plays a direct role in health and safety compliance, business continuity, tenant satisfaction, and long-term cost control.

Whether you manage an office, retail unit, warehouse, industrial site, or mixed-use building, having a consistent FM checklist helps you stay on top of what matters and prevent small faults from turning into expensive downtime.

Below is a practical facilities management checklist you can use to improve reliability, reduce risk, and keep your property running smoothly.

Why a facilities management checklist matters

A structured checklist helps you:

Keystone Insight: Many businesses only notice facilities management when something fails. A checklist keeps issues under control before they disrupt operations.

1) Statutory compliance and safety (priority area)

Compliance is the foundation of facilities management. If you miss key checks, you risk enforcement action, invalid insurance conditions, or avoidable safety incidents.

Fire safety

Keystone Insight: If you have five or more people on the premises, your fire risk assessment must be recorded in writing, and you must show that it is actively managed.

Emergency lighting

Keystone Insight: Emergency lighting failures often go unnoticed until a test is done. A regular testing schedule prevents last-minute compliance issues.

Electrical safety and PAT testing

Keystone Insight: A risk-based approach to electrical safety is essential. A warehouse environment and an office environment do not require the same testing routine, even for similar equipment.

Gas safety (where applicable)

Keystone Insight: Gas safety is an area where delays quickly become high risk. If there is any concern, it is always best to isolate and investigate rather than wait and see.

Water hygiene and Legionella control

Keystone Insight: Many Legionella risks increase during periods of low building occupancy. If parts of the building are unused, water systems must still be managed properly.

2) Planned preventative maintenance (PPM) checks

Planned preventative maintenance is where good facilities management saves serious money over time. It reduces breakdowns and extends the life of your assets.

Building fabric (structure and external condition)

Keystone Insight: Water ingress rarely starts as an emergency. Most major leaks begin as minor issues that are easy to repair if caught early.

Heating, ventilation and comfort

Keystone Insight: Many heating failures are actually control issues, blocked airflow, or circulation problems rather than boiler faults. A good checklist helps you identify the real cause faster.

Lighting and electrical reliability

3) Operational maintenance (day-to-day reliability)

These checks reduce tenant complaints, staff disruption, and emergency callouts.

Safe access and movement

Security and building access

Waste, hygiene and pest prevention

Keystone Insight: Pest issues are usually caused by access points and hygiene breakdowns, not chance. Consistent checks prevent repeat problems.

4) Tenant and staff experience (often overlooked)

Your building can be compliant and still feel poorly managed. These checks protect reputation and retention.

Keystone Insight: The fastest way to lose tenant confidence is slow response to small issues. Minor faults build into a bigger perception problem if they linger.

5) Documentation and reporting (protects you long-term)

Facilities management is not only about doing the work. It is about proving you have a system.

Keystone Insight: If there is an incident, it is rarely enough to say we maintain the building. A documented process shows you acted responsibly and consistently.

Suggested facilities management schedule (simple guide)

Daily or weekly checks

Monthly checks

Quarterly checks

Annual checks

Need help managing your commercial property?

If you want a facilities management partner who can handle maintenance, compliance checks, and ongoing property care with a clear process and reliable support, Keystone Facility Management can help.

Get in touch with our team to discuss a maintenance plan suited to your building, usage, and risk level.