What Happens After an Elevator Fails Inspection in Illinois
June 23, 2026
A failed elevator inspection in Illinois isn’t just a paperwork problem. The moment an inspector marks your elevator as non-compliant, a specific legal process begins under the Illinois Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM). That process comes with real deadlines, real fees, and real consequences if you don’t respond quickly.
This post is for building owners and property managers who are either dealing with a failed inspection right now or want to understand what they’d be facing if it happened. Knowing the right steps from the start is what keeps a manageable situation from turning into a costly, drawn-out one.
Here’s what happens next and what you need to do about every step that follows the dreaded failed inspection.
Understanding What a Failed Elevator Inspection Really Means
Every elevator inspection in Illinois produces an official report. That report is a legal document. It records the inspector’s findings, lists every deficiency, and determines whether your elevator is permitted to operate. It’s not a suggestion. It carries the full weight of state authority.
Passing inspection means your elevator is compliant and your Certificate of Operation remains valid. A failed inspection means deficiencies were found that prevent the elevator from meeting Illinois safety standards. What happens next depends on how serious those deficiencies are. Not every failure triggers an immediate shutdown, but every failure requires a documented correction within a specific window.
Severity matters. Some deficiencies are minor and allow continued operation under a conditional status. Others require the elevator to come out of service right away. Either way, the inspection report is now a legal obligation, and the clock is running.
For a detailed breakdown of what inspectors find most often, read Why Elevators Fail Inspections: The 10 Most Common Violations in Illinois.
What Happens After an Elevator Fails Inspection in Illinois
The moment an inspection fails, a specific chain of events is set in motion. The state has a defined process, and building owners are expected to follow it.
The Elevator Is Placed Out of Service
Under Illinois Administrative Code Title 41, an elevator that fails inspection for a serious safety deficiency must be taken out of service. That authority rests with the inspector, the building owner, or a licensed elevator contractor. In many cases, it happens on the spot.
“Out of service” has a clear legal meaning. The elevator can’t be used by occupants, staff, or anyone else until it’s been corrected, reinspected, and reinstated. The building owner is required to notify the OSFM when the elevator is taken out of service and again when it’s returned. These aren’t optional steps.
Your Certificate of Operation Is Suspended or Canceled
Every elevator in Illinois must have a valid Certificate of Operation displayed inside the cab where occupants can see it. When an inspection fails, that certificate is either suspended or canceled, depending on the nature and severity of the violation.
Suspension typically applies when the deficiency can be corrected within the standard window. Cancellation is more serious and usually results from significant safety violations or a history of non-compliance. Either way, the path to reinstatement is the same: correct the deficiencies, pass a re-inspection, and submit the application to the OSFM in that exact order. There are no shortcuts.
The State Is Now Formally Involved
Once an inspection fails, this is no longer an internal building matter. The violation is on record with the OSFM, and that has real implications for how the correction process works.
One detail that surprises many building owners: licensed elevator mechanics generally aren’t permitted to work on a non-compliant conveyance without state authorization, except in emergencies. You can’t simply call a contractor and have them start working without understanding what the state allows at each stage.
Every step in the process, from contractor coordination to parts procurement to re-inspection scheduling, eats into your correction window. Moving fast matters.
The Inspection Report Is Now Your Legal To-Do List
Every deficiency on the inspection report must be corrected exactly as cited. The language on the report is the standard that the re-inspection holds you to. Only a licensed elevator mechanic can do the work.
Before anything gets started, sit down with your contractor and go through the report line by line. Misreading a deficiency is one of the most common reasons elevators fail re-inspection, and that costs time and money you don’t need to spend.
The Immediate Steps to Take After a Failed Inspection
Once the inspection fails, take these steps in order.
Step 1: Notify Tenants & Post Signage
Your first responsibility is to communicate clearly with the people in your building. Post signage at every landing stating the elevator is temporarily out of service. If the elevator is the only accessible route for individuals with disabilities, that’s an ADA concern that needs to be treated as a priority, not an afterthought.
Document every tenant notification you send. That paper trail matters if a dispute or liability question comes up later.
Key action: Notify tenants the same day, post signage at all landings, and document everything in writing.
Step 2: Contact a Licensed Elevator Contractor the Same Day
The 30-day correction window starts on the date of the inspection, not the date you read the report. Same-day contact with a licensed elevator contractor isn’t optional. Illinois requires all elevator work to be performed by a licensed contractor, so confirm that before anything moves forward.
The sooner your contractor reviews the report and scopes the work, the better your chances of completing corrections, booking a re-inspection, and reinstating the certificate on time. Our elevator repair services are available 24/7 for situations like this.
Key action: Call a licensed elevator contractor the same day the inspection fails. Don’t wait.
Step 3: Review the Report Line by Line Before Work Begins
Every deficiency needs to be corrected the way it was cited, not in a way that seems close enough. Reviewing the full report with your contractor before any work begins also gives you a chance to look at the bigger picture.
In some cases, a pattern of deficiencies points to a broader issue and the smarter path forward is an elevator modernization rather than a series of individual repairs. Catching that early saves significant time and money.
Key action: Review every line of the report with your contractor before scheduling any work.
How Long Do You Have to Fix It?
The 30-Day Correction Window
Illinois law gives building owners 30 days from a failed inspection to correct all cited deficiencies. Unresolved violations can lead to significant fines, administrative hearings, or court proceedings.
That window closes faster than most owners expect; contractor availability, parts lead times, and re-inspection scheduling all compete for the same 30 days. Treat the deadline as a hard stop from day one.
The 60-Day Extension
If 30 days isn’t enough time, Illinois allows a one-time 60-day extension. It must be requested from and granted by the OSFM before the original 30-day window closes, and you must show that you’ve taken initial steps to resolve the issue. Once that window expires, the option goes with it.
A few important things to know about the extension:
- The elevator stays out of service during the entire extension period
- The extension gives you more time to complete corrections, it does not allow the elevator to run again
- The certificate isn’t reinstated until the full process is complete
How Often Do Elevators Need to Be Inspected in Illinois?
Illinois requires annual inspections for all elevators with no exceptions. The type of testing required depends on the system:
- Traction elevators: Category 1 test every year, Category 5 test every five years
- Hydraulic elevators: Category 1 Annual pressure test
Scheduling is entirely the building owner’s responsibility. The state doesn’t send reminders and they don’t always notify building owners of inspection schedules. The OSFM recommends scheduling at least 3 months before your certificate expiration date to allow time for any corrections that arise before the deadline.
When the schedule slips, costs stack up fast, and you’re stuck with an elevator that can’t legally run until everything is resolved.
Here’s something worth understanding: most failed inspections don’t come from sudden equipment failure. They trace back to skipped or delayed service cycles, problems that were building quietly over time, with no one looking. Staying on schedule is the most practical way to avoid this situation.
How to Get Your Certificate of Operation Reinstated
Building owners are responsible for managing this process, which means your elevator company is not obligated to coordinate or complete reinstatement on your behalf. Reinstatement follows three steps that must be completed in order:
- All cited deficiencies corrected by a licensed elevator mechanic
- A passing re-inspection conducted by a licensed inspector with the mechanic present
- A completed Certificate of Operation application submitted with the required documentation
Every correction must address the exact deficiency language on the inspection report, not a general repair in the same area, but a direct fix of what was cited. The mechanic’s certification is required as part of the application, so gather that documentation before scheduling re-inspection. Inspector availability varies, so book early, especially if you’re working against the 30-day correction deadline.
The elevator cannot legally operate until the certificate is issued. In Chicago, building owners submit applications and track reinstatement status through the city’s online portal, which requires a registered account to access. Submit the application completely and correctly the first time, because incomplete submissions can cause delays.
If you need help working through the process, our code compliance and violation removal services handle exactly this.
Need Help After a Failed Elevator Inspection?
A failed inspection doesn’t have to mean a long shutdown or a cycle of repeat penalties. Building owners who move quickly and follow the right steps get through this process faster and with fewer problems.
If you’re dealing with a failed inspection right now, or you want to make sure you never have to, Chicago Elevator is ready to help. Contact our team or request a quote, and we’ll walk you through exactly what needs to happen next.
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