Massachusetts Elevator Code Requirements
ASME A17.1-2013 — effective June 1, 2018 (full enforcement December 1, 2018)
Code Adoption
- Current Code
- ASME A17.1-2013
- Prior Code
- ASME A17.1-2004 with Massachusetts modifications (524 CMR 35.00 prior edition)
- Effective Date
- June 1, 2018 (full enforcement December 1, 2018)
- State Amendments
- Yes
Massachusetts adopts ASME A17.1-2013 with Massachusetts-specific modifications codified in 524 CMR 35.00. Key state amendments include: (1) Hydraulic machines, motor controllers, and motion controllers are prohibited in the hoistway or pit; (2) On all hydraulic elevators, piping between the overspeed valve and hydraulic jack shall be welded or threaded (not compression fittings); (3) Smoke and hot gas control requirements per 2.1.4; (4) All periodic tests must be witnessed by a state-employed inspector - no third-party QEI substitution permitted; (5) Five-year full-load weight tests administered by OPSI districts on a rotating calendar cycle; (6) Non-automatic elevators operating with an operator require licensing under 524 CMR 9.00.
Governing Authority
- Authority
- Massachusetts Office of Public Safety and Inspections (OPSI), Elevator Inspection Division - under the Division of Occupational Licensure
- Phone
- (617) 727-3200
- [email protected]
- Website
- Official Site →
Testing & Inspection Schedule
All elevators (except owner-occupied single-family residence elevators) must be thoroughly inspected and receive a practical test at intervals not exceeding one year per M.G.L. c. 143, § 64. Inspections are performed by Massachusetts-licensed elevator mechanics under the supervision and in the presence of a state elevator inspector employed by OPSI. Limited-use elevators (wheelchair lifts, dumbwaiters, vertical reciprocating conveyors) are inspected biennially (every 2 years). Owner-occupied single-family residence elevators are only inspected following installation, alteration, or modernization requiring a permit.
Category 1 periodic inspection and practical test of safety devices required annually per M.G.L. c. 143, § 64 and ASME A17.1-2013 Section 8.6.1.2. Performed by a Massachusetts-licensed elevator mechanic and witnessed by a state elevator inspector employed by OPSI. No-load safety test of buffers, governors, safeties, and other required devices.
Category 5 full-load, full-speed comprehensive safety test per ASME A17.1-2013 Section 8.6.1.6. Massachusetts administers five-year weight tests by OPSI district on a rotating schedule: Springfield (2026), Milford (2027), Boston A & B (2028-2029), Tewksbury (2030). Every fifth periodic inspection requires full-load safety testing including car and counterweight oil buffer tests at rated car speed with full contract load. Witnessed by Massachusetts-licensed state elevator inspector.
Additional Required Tests
The inspection certificate must be posted conspicuously in or near the cab or car of the elevator. Operating an elevator without a valid posted certificate subjects the owner to fines of $100 per day.
Licensing Requirements
Installation, construction, maintenance, alteration, modification, decommissioning, servicing, and repair of all elevator equipment regulated by 524 CMR. Required for all elevator work in Massachusetts.
Operation of non-automatic elevators requiring an attendant/operator. Governed by 524 CMR 9.00.
Entity registration required for any person or company employing Massachusetts-licensed elevator mechanics or seeking elevator permits. No person or entity may be issued a permit without being registered as an elevator contractor with OPSI.
Permit Requirements
Violations & Penalties
Violations of 524 CMR are subject to penalties under M.G.L. c. 143, §§ 62–71G, M.G.L. c. 22, § 22, 520 CMR 1.00 and 16.00. The state elevator inspector may seal equipment out of service after serving written notice to the building owner or lessee. In emergencies, no prior notice is required. Sealed equipment must be plainly marked with reason for shutdown. Failure to pay assessed fines within 30 days may result in elevator shutdown.
Failure to obtain required permits before commencing installation or alteration is a violation of M.G.L. c. 143 and 524 CMR. The elevator may be sealed out of service, and the owner is subject to enforcement action and civil penalties per 520 CMR 16.00.
Deficiency notices are issued with correction windows. Inspectors may seal equipment out of service for serious deficiencies. Operating an elevator with a lapsed or expired certificate subjects the owner to a $100 per day fine (accruing until OPSI receives a written inspection request or the elevator is placed out of service). Fines may escalate for repeat or willful violations.
Key Statutes & Regulations
Regulations
Key Notes for Massachusetts
Massachusetts elevator regulation is administered by two boards: (1) Board of Elevator Regulations (under OPSI) - governs equipment, inspections, permits, and contractor registration; (2) Board of Elevator Examiners (under Division of Occupational Licensure) - licenses elevator mechanics. Both operate under the Division of Occupational Licensure. The statewide elevator inspection hotline is (617) 727-3200. Incident reporting: (508) 820-1444. Scheduling: [email protected]. The 524 CMR framework covers a broad range of conveying equipment including specialized devices (stage elevators, casket lifts, construction hoists) through separate chapters. Massachusetts adopted ASME A17.1-2013 effective June 1, 2018, replacing the prior ASME A17.1-2004-based code.
Last verified: 2026-02-18
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