Manufacturing Site Audit Checklist
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About this site audit checklist
A manufacturing site audit checklist gives operations teams a consistent way to verify safety, quality, and process control on every visit. Instead of relying on memory (or whatever the loudest issue is that day), you walk the site in a structured order, capture evidence, and leave with a clear action plan.
Use this checklist for routine site audits, follow-ups after incidents or customer complaints, and pre-customer visits. It includes preparation checks, in-process checks, escalation criteria, and close-out actions — so you stop guessing and start knowing what’s really happening on the floor.
What this manufacturing site audit checklist covers
- Preparation and audit scope (documents, previous actions, PPE)
- Arrival and safety controls (emergency readiness, permits, high-risk work)
- Housekeeping and workplace organisation (5S basics that prevent defects and near misses)
- Process control and in-process checks (standard work, records, defect handling)
- Quality and traceability (status control, non-conformance segregation, end-to-end traceability)
- Equipment, maintenance, and calibration (guarding, PM status, calibration in-date)
- People, training, and shift handover (competence evidence and continuity)
- Escalation criteria and stop-the-line triggers
- Close-out actions (owners, due dates, and evidence for verification)
Who it’s for
This checklist works best for operations teams, site leaders, quality, and HSE — especially when you need consistent standards across multiple lines, shifts, or sites.
How to use it on a real audit
- Start with preparation — agree the scope and bring the right standards, otherwise you end up auditing opinions.
- Walk the site in a set order — safety controls first, then housekeeping, then process and quality.
- Observe work in progress — don’t just review paperwork. Watch at least one full cycle where possible.
- Record what you saw — note the location, the process step, and what ‘good’ looks like for comparison.
- Escalate immediately when required — use the stop-the-line triggers to avoid normalising risk.
- Close out before you leave — agree owners, due dates, and the evidence needed to verify completion.
Escalation criteria you should not negotiate
If you find an immediate safety risk, a critical quality risk, a traceability breakdown, defeated guarding/interlocks, or out-of-calibration measuring equipment, escalate on the spot. The goal is containment first, then root cause — not a tidy report after the fact.
Turn audits into measurable action
Audits only improve performance when findings become actions people actually complete. Ocasta replaces scattered notes and after-the-fact spreadsheets with structured checklists, clear ownership, and visibility of what’s been fixed — and what keeps coming back.
Disclaimer: This checklist is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal, regulatory, health and safety, or professional advice. You are responsible for ensuring compliance with applicable laws, standards, and internal policies.
Included questions
Here's what's included in this site audit checklist:
Preparation and scope (6)
Set the audit up properly so you get a true picture of performance — not a rushed snapshot.
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Yes/No
Audit date and time confirmed with site lead
Confirm who will escort you and where to meet on arrival.
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Dropdown
Audit scope defined
Be clear on what you are checking today to avoid gaps and scope creep.
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Yes/No
Standards and documents available
Latest SOPs, work instructions, risk assessments, control plans, and any customer or regulatory requirements.
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Yes/No
Previous audit actions reviewed
Bring the last action log and note any overdue or recurring issues to re-check.
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Yes/No
PPE requirements confirmed and available
Include any area-specific PPE (hearing protection, cut-resistant gloves, etc.).
-
Text
Audit participants (names and roles)
List the people joining the audit and their role (e.g. HSE, quality, maintenance, production).
Site arrival and safety controls (5)
Confirm the basics first. If safety controls are weak, everything else is noise.
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Yes/No
Site induction completed (if required)
Record any restrictions (no photography, restricted zones, escort requirements).
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Yes/No
Emergency information visible and current
Check muster points, emergency contacts, and evacuation routes are posted and legible.
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Yes/No
Fire exits and escape routes are clear
No blocked doors, taped exits, or stored materials in escape routes.
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Yes/No
First aid and spill kits available and accessible
Check locations match signage and kits are stocked.
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Dropdown
High-risk activities controlled today
If any are active, confirm permits and controls are in place.
Housekeeping and workplace organisation (5S) (5)
Good housekeeping reduces defects, downtime, and near misses — and makes problems obvious.
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Yes/No
Walkways are marked and clear
No trip hazards, stored items, trailing cables, or pallets in pedestrian routes.
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Yes/No
Materials are stored correctly
Racking condition, safe stacking, labels visible, and no overhanging loads.
-
Vibe
Workstations feel organised and controlled
Look for shadow boards, labelled locations, and ‘a place for everything’.
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Yes/No
Waste streams are separated and managed
General waste, recycling, hazardous waste, and scrap are clearly separated and labelled.
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Vibe
Cleanliness standard is met in production areas
Pay attention to oil leaks, dust build-up, swarf, and contamination risks.
Process control and in-process checks (6)
Verify the process is being followed as written — and that checks actually prevent defects.
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Yes/No
Current SOPs/work instructions available at point of use
Check version control and that teams can access them quickly.
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Vibe
Operators are following standard work
Observe at least one full cycle where possible. Note workarounds and why they exist.
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Yes/No
Critical-to-quality checks are completed and recorded
Confirm frequency, sampling plan, and sign-off are consistent with the control plan.
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Yes/No
In-process records are legible and complete
No missing fields, back-filling, or unclear initials.
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Dropdown
Defect handling process is being followed
Check how defects are identified, segregated, and dispositioned.
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Yes/No
Rework/repair is controlled and approved
Confirm rework instructions exist and rework is traceable.
Quality, traceability and non-conformance control (5)
If you cannot trace it, you cannot prove it — and you cannot fix it reliably.
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Yes/No
Incoming materials are identified and released before use
Check status labelling (e.g. quarantine, released, rejected) and FIFO controls.
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Yes/No
Batch/lot traceability works end-to-end
Pick one product and confirm you can trace key materials and process steps.
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Yes/No
Non-conforming material is segregated and clearly labelled
Look for locked cages/areas, clear signage, and no mixed status stock.
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Yes/No
Quality alerts and lessons learned are visible and current
Confirm teams can explain what changed and what to watch for.
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Dropdown
Customer complaints are linked to corrective actions
Check evidence that actions were implemented and verified.
Equipment, maintenance and calibration (5)
Reliable equipment reduces scrap, rework, and safety risk — and stops firefighting becoming normal.
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Yes/No
Machine guarding is in place and effective
No bypassing, missing guards, or defeated interlocks.
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Yes/No
Pre-use equipment checks are completed where required
Check daily/shift start checks are signed and dated.
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Dropdown
Planned maintenance status
Spot check whether PMs are on schedule and overdue work is understood.
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Yes/No
Calibration is in date for measuring equipment used today
Check stickers/certificates for gauges, torque tools, scales, and test equipment.
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Vibe
Breakdown response feels controlled
Look for clear escalation, downtime logging, and root cause follow-up — not repeated resets.
People, training and shift handover (4)
Standards only stick when people know what ‘good’ looks like and handovers don’t drop the baton.
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Dropdown
Training records for observed roles
Confirm competence sign-off for the tasks you observed.
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Yes/No
Shift handover completed and documented (if applicable)
Check key info: safety, quality issues, downtime, and priority actions.
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Dropdown
Daily briefing status
Confirm teams understand today’s priorities and risks.
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Vibe
Staffing level feels sufficient for safe, standard work
If not, note where corners are being cut (checks skipped, rushed changeovers, etc.).
Escalation criteria (stop the line triggers) (5)
Define what must be escalated immediately. This prevents ‘we’ll fix it later’ becoming the default.
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Yes/No
Immediate safety risk identified
If yes: stop the activity, make safe, and escalate to the site lead and HSE now.
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Yes/No
Critical quality risk identified (potential customer impact)
If yes: quarantine affected product, confirm containment, and escalate to quality lead.
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Yes/No
Traceability breakdown found
If yes: hold shipments until traceability is restored and verified.
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Yes/No
Guarding/interlock defeated or bypassed
If yes: stop equipment use and escalate to maintenance and HSE immediately.
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Yes/No
Critical measuring equipment found out of calibration
If yes: remove from use, assess product risk, and escalate to quality.
Close-out and action plan (6)
Turn findings into ownership, deadlines, and proof — so the audit improves performance, not paperwork.
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Yes/No
Findings summarised with site lead before leaving
No surprises later. Confirm what’s critical versus improvement.
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Yes/No
Actions assigned with owners and due dates
Every action needs one owner, one date, and a clear definition of done.
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Dropdown
Actions prioritised by risk
Use this to agree what gets done first.
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Text
Evidence required for close-out
E.g. photo, revised SOP, training record, calibration certificate, maintenance completion proof.
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Text
Follow-up date agreed
Set the date for verification (desk-based or on-site).
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Signature
Auditor signature
Sign to confirm the audit was completed and recorded accurately.