Inspection lists
Life safety equipment has to be inspected on a schedule — and missing an inspection isn’t just an oversight, it’s a compliance gap. Inspection lists keep those recurring checks organized so what’s due surfaces before it becomes a problem.
What an inspection list does
Section titled “What an inspection list does”An inspection list gathers the life safety items that need checking and presents them so you can see what’s due and act on it. Instead of tracking dates in your head or a spreadsheet, the system holds the schedule and shows you where each item stands.
Sorted by urgency
Section titled “Sorted by urgency”Items are ordered so the most pressing rise to the top. What’s overdue or coming due soonest is what you see first, so your attention goes where the risk is. You’re not scanning a flat list trying to work out what matters — the list does that sorting for you.
Performing an inspection
Section titled “Performing an inspection”When you inspect an item, you record the result. A passing inspection is logged and the item’s compliance stands with a fresh date. A failing inspection is where the system’s real value shows: it doesn’t just note the failure, it starts the corrective process. See When something fails inspection for what happens next.
Why this keeps you compliant
Section titled “Why this keeps you compliant”The whole point is that nothing slips. Because the list tracks every recurring check and surfaces what’s due, you always know your inspection posture — what’s current, what’s coming, and what’s late. That’s the difference between hoping you’re compliant and knowing you are, with the records to show it.