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MetricsMar 15, 20255 min read

MTTR vs MTBF: What's the Difference?

Introduction

MTTR and MTBF are two of the most important metrics in maintenance management. Understanding what they measure, how to calculate them, and how to use them is essential for any maintenance professional.

MTBF: Mean Time Between Failures

Definition

MTBF measures the average time between equipment failures. It indicates equipment reliability—higher MTBF means more reliable equipment.

Formula

MTBF = Total Operating Time / Number of Failures

Example

A pump operates 8,760 hours in a year and experiences 4 failures.

MTBF = 8,760 / 4 = 2,190 hours

On average, the pump runs 2,190 hours between failures.

Key Points

  • Only count unplanned failures, not planned maintenance
  • Use actual operating time, not calendar time
  • Track separately for different failure modes if needed
  • Higher MTBF = better reliability

What MTBF Tells You

  • Equipment reliability trends
  • Effectiveness of preventive maintenance
  • Comparison between similar assets
  • When to consider replacement

MTTR: Mean Time to Repair

Definition

MTTR measures the average time to repair equipment after a failure. It indicates maintenance efficiency—lower MTTR means faster repairs.

Formula

MTTR = Total Repair Time / Number of Repairs

Example

The same pump's 4 failures required 2, 4, 3, and 3 hours to repair.

MTTR = (2 + 4 + 3 + 3) / 4 = 3 hours

On average, repairs take 3 hours.

What to Include in Repair Time

Start: When failure is detected

End: When equipment returns to normal operation

Include:

  • Diagnosis time
  • Parts acquisition
  • Actual repair work
  • Testing and verification

Some organizations track MTTR variants:

  • Mean Time to Respond: Time until technician arrives
  • Mean Time to Restore: Total downtime including all delays

Key Points

  • Consistent measurement criteria are essential
  • Lower MTTR = faster repairs
  • Don't confuse with Mean Time to Restore (includes waiting time)

Using MTBF and MTTR Together

Calculating Availability

These metrics combine to calculate equipment availability:

Availability = MTBF / (MTBF + MTTR)

Using our pump example:

Availability = 2,190 / (2,190 + 3) = 99.86%

The Reliability-Maintainability Balance

  • High MTBF, Low MTTR: Ideal situation—reliable equipment that's quick to fix
  • High MTBF, High MTTR: Reliable but slow to repair—ensure spare parts availability
  • Low MTBF, Low MTTR: Unreliable but quick to fix—focus on root cause analysis
  • Low MTBF, High MTTR: Worst case—prioritize for improvement or replacement

Improving MTBF

Strategies to increase time between failures:

Root Cause Analysis

Don't just fix failures—understand why they happen and prevent recurrence.

Preventive Maintenance Optimization

Schedule PM based on failure patterns, not arbitrary intervals.

Operating Procedure Improvements

Ensure operators follow best practices that extend equipment life.

Quality Parts

Cheap replacement parts often fail faster.

Design Improvements

Modify equipment to address recurring failure modes.

Improving MTTR

Strategies to reduce repair time:

Training

Skilled technicians diagnose and repair faster.

Parts Availability

Stock critical spares to eliminate waiting time.

Documentation

Provide repair procedures, troubleshooting guides, and equipment history.

Tool Availability

Ensure proper tools are accessible when needed.

Mobile CMMS

Give technicians instant access to information at the equipment.

Tracking in Your CMMS

A CMMS like FacilityLane automatically calculates MTBF and MTTR from work order data:

  • Records failure times from work order creation
  • Tracks repair duration from start to completion
  • Calculates metrics by equipment, location, or category
  • Shows trends over time
  • Alerts when metrics cross thresholds

Common Mistakes

Inconsistent Definitions

Different people measuring differently makes data useless. Document standards clearly.

Including Planned Downtime

MTBF should only count unplanned failures. Planned maintenance doesn't indicate reliability.

Ignoring Context

A 100-hour MTBF might be excellent for one type of equipment and terrible for another.

Not Acting on Data

Metrics only matter if they drive decisions. Use them to prioritize improvements.

Conclusion

MTBF and MTTR are fundamental metrics that reveal equipment reliability and maintenance efficiency. Track them consistently, understand what they're telling you, and use them to drive continuous improvement.

FacilityLane automatically tracks these metrics and provides insights to help you improve equipment performance.

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