Preventive Maintenance vs. Predictive Maintenance: What’s the Difference?

Truck broken down on side of the road: header image for Preventive maintenance vs predictive maintenance blog

Preventive Maintenance vs Predictive Maintenance

Preventive maintenance schedules are built on averages and blanket recommendations. Change the oil every 15,000 miles. Inspect the brakes every quarter. Replace filters on a calendar. It’s logical, and it’s also a guess, based on what an average truck, driven by an average driver, in an average climate might need.

Let me ask, is your fleet average? 

Most fleets we work with are anything but average, and they’re finding their maintenance strategy can’t keep up.    

Now, fleets are looking to Predictive Maintenance (PdM) to keep up, but there can be some confusion about how it differs from and relates to preventive maintenance (PM). 

Preventive Maintenance

Preventive maintenance is the backbone of any serious fleet maintenance program, and honestly, I don’t think it’s going anywhere. Time-based and mileage-based service intervals prevent a significant number of failures. Compared to running equipment until it breaks, PM is a clear operational win.

The limitation isn’t that PM is wrong, but rather that its scope is limited. It’s based on averages, not your specific equipment. A Class 8 truck running routes through the Southwest idles and wears differently than the same model running through the Northeast in January. A 2021 Freightliner doesn’t behave the same way as a 2019 Kenworth, even on the same schedule. PM doesn’t address these differences. It treats every truck equally, leaving your maintenance strategy with gaps, and leading to unexpected downtime with a whole lot of headaches. 

How Predictive Maintenance Is Different 

The truck tells you what needs attention and when, even if it isn’t obvious to the driver yet. Rather than waiting for a service interval or breakdown to catch a developing maintenance issue, PdM surfaces it early, often days or weeks before it becomes a breakdown event.

Head-to-Head: How They Compare

Preventive MaintenancePredictive Maintenance
TriggerCalendar or mileage intervalReal-time data + condition signals
Based onIndustry averagesData from trucks
Accounts ForExpected wear, prevalent issues, and existing fault codesReal-time conditions, hidden failures, and potential issues not found during PM
MissesComponent failures between intervalsRequires data infrastructure
Best forBaseline compliance + routine serviceReducing unplanned downtime and unexpected maintenance costs 

The Real Cost of Relying on PM Alone

Unfortunately, unplanned failures don’t happen on a schedule. They happen at 2 a.m., 300 miles from the nearest terminal, when a pattern of failures that had been developing for weeks finally becomes a breakdown.

That $2,000 repair in the shop becomes an $8,000 emergency on the roadside, between towing fees, emergency labor rates, parts markups, and the downstream cost of a missed delivery. PdM doesn’t eliminate the need for preventive maintenance. Instead, it identifies patterns and failures that go undetected during regular PM, allowing fleets to schedule maintenance in advance rather than deal with a roadside breakdown. 

Which One Should You Use?

From what I’ve seen, the most successful fleets are making use of both.

Preventive maintenance handles your known, scheduled service needs. Predictive maintenance fills the gap by using your fleet’s data to find patterns and predict downtime. Layering the strategies together ensures your maintenance strategy is fully covered.

If you want to understand how PdM works in practice, how fleets are deploying it, and how to evaluate whether it makes sense for your fleet, we put it all in one place.


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