The Commercial Refrigeration Maintenance Checklist Every Owner Should Print
If you walk into a kitchen or grocery back room and nobody can point to a refrigeration maintenance calendar, you're one compressor failure away from a bad week. Here's the checklist we give every new client, daily, weekly, monthly, and quarterly tasks that cover everything from prep tables to rooftop condensers.
Print it, tape it inside a kitchen cabinet, and assign a name to each section. That single act of assignment prevents more breakdowns than any piece of equipment you could buy.
Daily (60 seconds per unit)
This is the "did anything change overnight" pass, usually done by the opening manager during temperature log rounds.
- Record the internal temperature of every refrigerated unit. Walk-in coolers should read 1-3°C; walk-in freezers -18 to -12°C; ice machines' water at 4-10°C.
- Listen to each unit for new sounds: knocking, buzzing, or a fan that's louder than yesterday.
- Check the drain pan on reach-ins and prep tables, standing water is a red flag.
- Confirm door gaskets seal (a dollar bill placed between the gasket and frame should feel taut when you close the door).
- Remove any obvious food debris from gaskets and interior floor drains.
Weekly (10-15 minutes per unit)
Usually handled by a shift lead or maintenance-minded employee.
- Vacuum the condenser intake grille on every reach-in, prep table, and ice machine. Use a brush attachment to pull surface dust off the fins.
- Wipe down the outside of every condenser cabinet and the tops of all units.
- Inspect door gaskets for tears, mold, or missing sections. Replace any gasket with visible damage.
- Check walk-in evaporator coils visually for frost thickness. A light film is normal; a solid sheet of ice is not.
- Log any unusual temperature readings or symptoms in a shared note, one place the whole team can see the pattern.
Monthly (30 minutes per unit)
Pick a low-traffic time (right after a weekend close works well).
- Remove front service panels on reach-ins and prep tables. Shine a flashlight through each condenser coil, if you can't see light, schedule professional cleaning.
- Use a soft bristle brush (in the direction of the fins) to loosen surface dust, then vacuum.
- Clean the drain pan and the accessible section of the drain line on each walk-in. A cup of hot water with a small amount of bleach run through the drain prevents algae.
- Test the walk-in door closer and auto-close function. Doors that don't fully self-close are a major cause of high-temp events.
- Inspect visible refrigerant lines for oil stains, an oily residue around a fitting or coil typically indicates a slow leak.
- Verify all temperature alarms and remote monitoring are reporting correctly.
Quarterly (professional service, schedule it in)
This is the service-pro layer. We don't recommend DIY for any of these tasks, they require training, coil-safe chemistry, and a written documentation trail.
- Deep coil cleaning on every condenser coil (rooftop, ice machine, reach-in, prep table, walk-in).
- Evaporator coil cleaning on all walk-ins.
- Drain pan and drain line service on every walk-in and display case.
- Fan motor and blade inspection; lubrication where applicable.
- Door gasket and hinge inspection with replacement as needed.
- Refrigerant charge check (visual, sight glass, subcooling measurement if accessible).
- Airflow verification across every evaporator and condenser.
- Written report with before/after photos on every unit. File this with your equipment records, it protects warranties and satisfies most health-inspection documentation requirements.
Annually
- Full electrical inspection of each unit (connections, contactors, starter components).
- Review and replace all suspect door gaskets, even if they look okay.
- Pull and review 12 months of temperature logs, look for creeping upward trends that indicate slow degradation.
- Audit your equipment inventory and replacement reserves. Know which units are past typical service life and budget accordingly.
Who should do what?
A workable division of labor:
- Opening manager: Daily temperature logs and sound checks.
- Shift lead / PM employee: Weekly surface cleaning, gasket checks.
- Senior staff / GM: Monthly deeper inspections, documentation review.
- Professional service: Quarterly deep cleaning, annual electrical inspection, any task behind a sealed panel or on a roof.
The single biggest predictor of whether a commercial kitchen's refrigeration will fail in a given year isn't the age of the equipment, it's whether anyone was assigned to check it on a schedule.
Want a customized version of this checklist with your specific equipment listed out? Book a first cleaning from $40/unit, it includes a printed, unit-by-unit PM plan for your operation.
Want this checklist, customized to your equipment?
Book a first cleaning from $40/unit, includes a printed PM plan for every unit on site.
