04 FAQ

Common Questions, Straight Answers

The questions property managers ask most - answered without hedging, from someone who has been in the machine rooms.

How often does a commercial elevator need to be inspected?

Most states require annual inspections for commercial elevators, conducted by a licensed inspector and witnessed by a state-authorized inspector. Some jurisdictions - including New York City - require semi-annual inspections. In Connecticut, the Department of Administrative Services (DAS) mandates annual Category 1 tests, with a Category 3 (hydraulic) or Category 5 (traction) full-load safety test required on a 5-year cycle. Annual inspection does not substitute for routine maintenance - those are two separate obligations with separate costs and documentation requirements.

Check your state's inspection schedule →

What is the difference between a full maintenance contract and an oil and grease contract?

A full maintenance (FM) contract covers routine maintenance visits, all parts, labor, and callback service for covered repairs - at a fixed monthly cost. An oil and grease (O&G) contract covers only lubrication, minor adjustments, and cleaning during scheduled visits. Any callback or repair beyond that is billed separately at time-and-materials rates. O&G contracts cost roughly one-third as much upfront, but a single major repair - a relay board, a hydraulic valve, a motor - can cost more than a year of the price difference. Buildings with aging equipment or frequent callbacks almost always come out ahead on FM. Buildings with new equipment in warranty may do fine on O&G short-term.

See current cost ranges for both contract types →

What should I do when someone is trapped in my elevator?

First: do not attempt to manually open the doors or extract the passenger yourself. Contact your elevator service company's emergency line immediately - they are required to provide 24/7 callback response. If the passenger requires medical attention or there is no response from the service company within a reasonable time, call 911. Stay in voice contact with the trapped person through the elevator's emergency phone or by talking through the door. Document the incident thoroughly: time trapped, service company response time, condition of passenger on release. Notify your insurer. Under property manager liability standards, documented knowledge of recurring problems with the same cab - and failure to act - is the primary negligence exposure.

Use the Emergency Response Checklist →

How long can an elevator legally be out of service?

There is no federal law specifying an exact number of days. However, if your building has tenants or visitors who depend on elevator access for disability-related reasons, extended downtime creates ADA exposure under Title III (commercial) or the Fair Housing Act (residential). Courts and the DOJ treat 'prompt repair' as an active obligation - not a passive one. In practice, the risk window opens the moment you have documented notice of the outage and have not initiated service. Buildings with a single elevator and mobility-impaired tenants face the most acute exposure. Acceptable practice: service call initiated within hours of discovery, alternative accommodations offered in writing within 24 hours, and a repair timeline communicated to tenants.

Document a service response issue →

What elevator contract clauses should I watch out for at renewal?

Five provisions cost building managers the most money: (1) Automatic renewal clauses - most contracts auto-renew for 1–5 years with 60–90 day cancellation windows; miss the window and you're locked in. (2) Exclusion lists - full maintenance contracts often exclude major components like hydraulic cylinders, motor-generator sets, solid-state drives. Read what is NOT covered. (3) Callback response time language - the contract should specify a maximum response time in hours, not 'reasonable time.' (4) Parts pricing caps - if the contract allows separate billing for parts, negotiate a defined markup ceiling (e.g., list price + 15–20%). (5) Early termination penalties - some contracts bill out the remaining months if you exit early. Know your exit before you sign.

Full negotiation playbook →

When does an elevator need to be modernized vs. fully replaced?

Modernization replaces the controller, drive system, fixtures, and cab finishes while keeping the original shaft, hoistway, and structural components. Full replacement tears out everything including the machine, rails, and cab. Modernization is generally 30–50% cheaper than replacement and is the right call when the shaft is sound and core mechanical components are serviceable. Full replacement makes sense when equipment is over 30 years old, original parts are no longer available, or you need to change the elevator's use category (e.g., freight to passenger). A practical indicator: if you've spent more than 18 months of your monthly maintenance contract cost on repairs in the past 12 months, get a modernization assessment.

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What is a Category 5 elevator test and how much does it cost?

A Category 5 test - also called a full-load safety test or 5-year test - is a mandatory load-bearing test required for traction elevators every 5 years in most states, including Connecticut. It verifies that safety mechanisms (governors, safeties, buffers) function correctly under full rated load. The elevator must be taken out of service, weighted to rated capacity, and safety devices engaged at speed. Cost ranges from $800–$3,500 depending on equipment age, rated capacity, and whether access components need preparation. Buildings that skip the Category 5 test risk lapsed certificates - in Connecticut, DAS can order same-day shutdown of any elevator operating with an expired Certificate of Operation.

Full inspection and testing timeline →

What is a hydraulic elevator single-bottom cylinder, and why is it a liability risk?

Older hydraulic elevators - typically pre-1990 - use a single-bottom cylinder design: a steel tube buried in the ground beneath the elevator, filled with hydraulic fluid. These cylinders corrode from the outside in and can leak hydraulic oil into the soil and groundwater, creating environmental liability. In Connecticut, ASME A17.1-2013 (adopted effective 2018) mandates that buildings still operating single-bottom cylinders must replace them with double-bottom (PVC-lined) cylinders or install a continuous leak-detection system. Replacement cost ranges from $15,000–$60,000. This liability is commonly undisclosed in commercial real estate transactions - the buyer assumes the cost at closing.

Run the due diligence walkthrough →

How do I know if my elevator company is actually maintaining the equipment?

Request maintenance logs on a defined schedule - most contracts entitle you to written records of every visit. Look for specificity. A record that says 'performed maintenance' with no further detail is a red flag. Legitimate service records list lubricated components by name, adjusted items, tested safety devices, and any observed anomalies with corrective actions. Cross-reference callback frequency with maintenance visit frequency - an elevator that generates callbacks a week after a 'completed' maintenance visit should generate questions. Ask to walk the machine room with your mechanic: oil on the pit floor, dried grease on rope sheaves, and visible corrosion on the controller are indicators of deferred maintenance.

Document a service quality issue →

Am I required to have an elevator in my commercial building?

Under the ADA's Title III safe harbor, private commercial buildings that are three stories or fewer and 3,000 square feet or less per floor are not required to install an elevator - with four specific exceptions: shopping malls, professional offices of health care providers, transit terminals, and airport passenger terminals. If your building contains a medical or clinical practice, the exemption does not apply regardless of building size. Connecticut state building code (based on the 2018 IBC) can impose stricter requirements than the federal ADA floor, particularly for mixed-use occupancies. If you are buying a building and plan to rely on the exemption, confirm it with a licensed professional before closing.

Full ADA elevator exemption analysis →