How maintenance providers should be managed in a tachograph review

How maintenance providers should be managed in a tachograph review matters from the tachograph and driver-hours side of the file because the provider may do the work, but the operator still needs a file that shows the work was specified, completed and checked properly.
The businesses that handle it best are rarely dramatic. They are simply the ones whose paperwork still reads clearly under pressure.
Outsourcing maintenance does not outsource responsibility for understanding the evidence.
What the issue really comes down to
The provider may do the work, but the operator still needs a file that shows the work was specified, completed and checked properly. For many operators, the difficulty starts when the file stops telling the story in a straight line and starts relying on explanation, memory or local knowledge instead.
Viewed through driver-hours discipline, the question is not whether the business has a policy somewhere. It is whether the person reviewing the data could open the record and show a competent outsider what happened without having to fill gaps verbally.
What to inspect first
The quickest route to the truth is always the live record, not the broad reassurance. Start with the paperwork or system entry that ought to settle the point straight away.
- service agreements and inspection schedules.
- the quality of the paperwork received back from the provider.
- whether missing or unclear records are challenged quickly.
- The point of the check is to leave a cleaner trail than the one you started with.
Why operators still get caught out
Operators come unstuck when they rely on the provider’s competence but never verify whether the paperwork supports that confidence.
The danger usually grows in a quiet way. One late entry becomes a pattern. One vague action point becomes a habit. Then the business reaches the point where a simple question can no longer be answered cleanly from the record alone.
The professional next step
Treat provider management as an evidence job, not a relationship job.
The aim is not a longer file. It is a clearer one.
For the underlying reference, see Drivers hours and tachographs.
Simon Drever
Simon Drever is Editor in Chief of The Golden Mount, with 20 years of transport and logistics support, operational management and compliance experience. His editorial focus is practical transport reporting that explains what operators need to understand, evidence and fix when standards are tested properly.


