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Guide14 min read

MTBF and MTTR: The Reliability Metrics That Matter

Calculate, interpret, and act on Mean Time Between Failures and Mean Time to Repair — with formulas, benchmarks, and practical PM-interval setting.

— What is MTBF

MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) is the average time a piece of equipment runs between unplanned breakdowns. It is the most direct quantitative measure of asset reliability. Higher MTBF means fewer failures means less unplanned downtime. MTBF is typically expressed in operating hours for high-utilisation assets and in days or months for lower-utilisation assets.

Formula: MTBF = Total operational hours during the measurement period ÷ Number of failures during the measurement period.

Example: A conveyor that ran 2,400 hours in the past year and broke down 4 times has an MTBF of 600 hours. The next failure is statistically expected after 600 operating hours of runtime — though real-world failure distributions vary. Set PM intervals well below MTBF to catch deterioration before failure.

— What is MTTR

MTTR (Mean Time to Repair) is the average time it takes to restore equipment to service after a failure occurs. It measures your maintenance team's response and repair capability. Lower MTTR means faster recovery means less production loss per failure event.

Formula: MTTR = Total repair hours during the measurement period ÷ Number of completed repairs during the measurement period.

Example: 4 repairs that took 1.5, 2, 3, and 2.5 hours total 9 hours of repair time. MTTR = 9 ÷ 4 = 2.25 hours per repair on average. The next failure response is statistically expected to take 2.25 hours from notification to back-in-service.

— What drives high MTTR

MTTR has three main components, and the dominant one varies by operation:

  • Diagnosis time — identifying what failed and why. High when asset history is poor and technicians are working from scratch each time. CMMS that surfaces asset history at QR-scan substantially reduces diagnosis time.
  • Parts sourcing time — waiting for the right part to arrive. Often the dominant factor in SMB operations; reducing critical-spare-parts lead time often cuts MTTR more than any other intervention.
  • Repair time — the actual mechanical or electrical work to fix the issue. Usually the smallest component; "the repair itself was 30 minutes, but it took 2 days to get the right part" is the common pattern.

— Setting MTBF targets

MTBF targets should reflect your actual operational reality, not vendor marketing. Sources for setting targets:

  • Manufacturer specification — what MTBF does the OEM expect under normal operating conditions? This is the engineering baseline.
  • Historical baseline — what was your MTBF 12 months ago? Improving on baseline is the first realistic goal; doubling MTBF is achievable through focused PM programs.
  • Industry benchmarks — compare against similar assets in similar environments. Trade associations and consulting reports publish these for major equipment categories.
  • Production requirement — how much downtime can this asset's failure absorb before causing a production stoppage? This drives criticality ranking and PM priority.

— Using MTBF to set PM intervals

MTBF is a key input to PM interval setting. A common engineering rule: set your PM interval at 50–75% of MTBF. If your motor has an MTBF of 1,200 hours, schedule inspection PM at 600–900 hours. This catches deterioration before failure without over-maintaining (which wastes labour) or under-maintaining (which causes the failures the PM was supposed to prevent).

Monitor MTBF trends after changing PM intervals. If MTBF improves following a PM interval reduction, the maintenance was catching something that would have caused a failure. If MTBF stays the same, the interval may be over-specified — try lengthening it to test. This iterative MTBF-driven PM tuning is the foundation of mature reliability engineering.

— MTBF traps to avoid

Three common MTBF calculation traps:

  • Using calendar time instead of operating time — overstates MTBF for low-utilisation assets and understates for high-utilisation. Always use operating hours when meters or counters are available.
  • Counting only major failures — minor stoppages and "operator-resolved" issues mask real reliability problems. Track all unplanned events.
  • Mixing dissimilar assets in one MTBF — averaging MTBF across a fleet of diverse equipment loses the per-asset insight. Calculate per critical asset.

— Industry benchmarks for MTBF

Rough MTBF benchmarks by equipment category (varies by industry, operating conditions, and PM discipline):

  • Industrial centrifugal pump: 4,000–8,000 operating hours between failures
  • Conveyor belt drive system: 3,000–6,000 hours
  • Hydraulic press: 2,000–5,000 hours
  • Commercial HVAC rooftop unit: 5,000–12,000 hours
  • Walk-in cooler refrigeration system: 4,000–8,000 hours
  • CNC machine spindle: 2,500–7,000 hours depending on usage intensity
  • Forklift (electric): 6,000–10,000 hours

— World-class MTTR targets

World-class MTTR varies by asset criticality and operation type. For SMB and mid-market manufacturing operations: critical production equipment under 2 hours MTTR is excellent, 2-4 hours is good, 4-8 hours is functional, over 8 hours suggests parts-sourcing problems or skill gaps. For property management and commercial facilities: under 24 hours for most maintenance issues is functional, under 4 hours for safety-related issues is required.

MTTR is more easily improvable than MTBF in most operations — better parts inventory management, better asset history at scan, structured emergency-response protocols all reduce MTTR within 60-90 days of focused effort. MTBF improvement requires sustained PM discipline over 6-18 months.

— Tracking MTBF / MTTR automatically

Calculating MTBF and MTTR manually from work-order spreadsheets is administratively expensive — typically 4-8 hours per month per asset category. Modern CMMS like Maintoro calculates MTBF and MTTR automatically from work-order history. Every work order tagged as breakdown response feeds MTBF and MTTR calculations; trend dashboards surface assets with declining reliability or rising repair times.

The administrative burden disappears, and the data quality is higher because calculations are automated rather than manually compiled. Maintenance managers can focus on what to do about the trends rather than on assembling the trend data.

— Using MTBF and MTTR for capital decisions

MTBF and MTTR are critical inputs to capital-replacement decisions. An asset with declining MTBF (failing more often) and rising MTTR (taking longer to repair) is approaching end of useful life. The economics typically favour replacement when annualised repair cost (parts + labour) plus production-impact cost exceeds 50-70% of replacement cost.

Boards and CFOs respond to data-driven capital requests far better than to anecdotal ones. "We need to replace the press because it keeps breaking" produces skepticism. "MTBF declined from 1,800 to 600 hours over 18 months, MTTR rose from 2.5 to 5 hours, annualised repair cost is now $34K against a replacement cost of $58K" produces approvals. Tracking MTBF and MTTR is what enables this kind of capital-defensible argument.

Track MTBF and MTTR automatically

Maintoro calculates MTBF and MTTR from your work order history. Trend dashboards surface assets with declining reliability — no spreadsheet wrangling.

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