Keep your generator ready all year, not just during storm season.
Regular maintenance is the simplest way to make sure your generator starts when the power goes out. We handle the schedule, the checklist, and the follow-up, so you don’t have to think about it.
Choose the level of care that fits your property.
Every property is different, so we keep the options simple. Start with a basic plan and adjust once we’ve seen how often your generator runs and what it needs.
- • One full maintenance visit per year
- • System inspection, testing, and fluid changes
- • Battery and starting system check
- • Simple written summary after each visit
- • Two planned visits per year (pre- and post-storm season)
- • Load and transfer tests to confirm real performance
- • Fuel, filters, and connections checked and serviced
- • Priority scheduling before major storms when possible
- • Custom schedule (often 3–4 visits per year)
- • Priority response for service calls
- • Detailed reporting for owners or managers
- • Coordination with your existing staff or vendors
What we do during a typical maintenance visit.
Every visit follows a clear checklist so nothing important is missed. We adjust the details for your brand, fuel type, and how often your generator runs.
At the end, you get a simple summary in plain language—what we checked, what we serviced, and anything we recommend watching.
- • Overall condition of the unit and enclosure
- • Control panel, alerts, and error codes
- • Wiring, connections, and visible wear
- • Signs of leaks, corrosion, or damage
- • Oil, coolant, and filter changes as needed
- • Fuel system inspection and basic cleaning
- • Battery testing and connection tightening
- • Belts, hoses, and moving components check
- • Start and run under normal operating conditions
- • Transfer switch function test (where possible)
- • Basic load checks appropriate for the visit
- • Final inspection and clean-up of the work area
How often should you service your generator?
The right schedule depends on how often it runs, its size, and how critical it is to your property. Here’s a simple starting point:
- Light use: Mostly weekly test runs, rare outages → at least once per year.
- Moderate use: Runs a few times each storm season → twice per year.
- Heavy/critical use: Regular outages or critical operations → multiple visits per year.
At your first visit, we’ll look at: usage history, age of the unit, local conditions (coastal vs inland), and any past issues. Then we recommend a plan that fits—not more than you need, but enough to keep you confident.
Ready to get your generator on a simple maintenance plan?
The easiest way to start is with a single maintenance visit. We inspect, service, and then recommend a schedule that fits your home or business.