Life-saving appliances are the equipment your crew will depend on when everything else has failed — and SOLAS Chapter III mandates that they must be in working order and ready for immediate use at all times, before departure and throughout the voyage. This is not aspirational language; it is a regulatory requirement that PSC officers enforce at every boarding. An expired life raft service certificate, a lifeboat engine that won't start, a corroded on-load release hook, a davit wire fall past its renewal date, or a hydrostatic release unit beyond its expiry — any one of these turns a routine inspection into a vessel detention. Resolution MSC.402(96) established the framework for maintenance, thorough examination, operational testing, overhaul, and repair of lifeboats, rescue boats, launching appliances, and release gear. The service provider must hold valid authorisation certificates for each specific equipment type per MSC.402(96) Section 8. Resolution MSC.554(108), effective 1 January 2026, introduces amendments addressing lifeboat release mechanisms and lowering speeds. The maintenance regime spans from weekly visual inspections through monthly engine runs and davit tests, quarterly waterborne launches, annual thorough examinations by authorised service providers, to five-yearly overhaul, load testing, and recertification. For inflatable life rafts, servicing at approved stations at intervals not exceeding 12 months is mandatory — and a valid raft service with an expired HRU equals non-compliant, because PSC inspectors check both dates independently. Marine Inspection already provides an LSA checklist with 70+ inspection items across 9 safety categories — book a demo to see how automated scheduling, service tracking, and PSC-ready documentation work across your fleet.
Complete LSA Maintenance Schedule
| Equipment / Task | Frequency | Regulatory Basis | Who Performs | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lifeboat Visual Inspection | Weekly | SOLAS III/20 | Ship's crew (designated officer) | Hull condition, davit condition, hook position, equipment stowage, painter condition, drain plugs fitted. |
| Lifeboat Engine Run | Monthly | SOLAS III/20, MSC.402(96) | Ship's crew (engineer) | Run engine minimum 3 minutes (if ambient temp permits). Check gearbox, fuel level, cooling water, battery charge, exhaust. |
| Lifeboat Turn-Out | Monthly | SOLAS III/20 | Ship's crew | Move lifeboats from stowed position without crew aboard. Test launching appliance function. Weather/sea permitting. |
| Lifeboat Waterborne Launch | 3 Months | SOLAS III/19.3.4.3 | Assigned operating crew | Launch with crew, manoeuvre in water, test engine under load, test steering, recovery. Different boat each drill. |
| Free-Fall Lifeboat Launch | 6 Months | SOLAS III/19.3.3.4 | Assigned crew only | Free-fall launch with operating crew. Simulated launch every 6 months if admin extends to 12 months. MSC.535(107) amendments. |
| On-Load Release Gear Test | Annual | MSC.402(96), MSC.1/Circ.1206/Rev.1 | Authorised service provider | Operational testing of hook assemblies, pins, bearings, welds. Partial load test. Full engage/release/reset sequence. Photographic evidence. |
| Lifeboat Annual Thorough Exam | Annual | MSC.402(96) Section 8 | Authorised service provider (certified per manufacturer) | Structural assessment, engine/propulsion, manoeuvring, power supply, bailing, equipment inventory against LSA Code list. Detailed report issued. |
| Davit & Winch Annual Inspection | Annual | MSC.402(96) | Authorised service provider | Davit structure: corrosion, misalignment, deformation. Wire/sheave condition. Lubrication. Brake system. Winch motor. Limit switches. |
| Davit Load Test | 5 Years | MSC.402(96) | Authorised service provider / approved facility | Overload test sequence: 25%, 50%, 75%, 100% overload with deflection measurement. Wire fall replacement. Certificate issued valid 5 years. |
| Inflatable Life Raft Service | 12 Months max | SOLAS III/20.8.1, A.761(18) | Approved service station (flag state authorised) | Inflate raft, inspect for damage, verify all equipment vs packing list, replace expired pyrotechnics/rations, test mechanical components. Certificate issued. |
| HRU Replacement | 2 Years max | SOLAS III/20, manufacturer specs | Ship's crew or service station | Replace regardless of condition. Some manufacturers require annual replacement. Expired HRU = non-compliant even if raft is serviced. |
| Rescue Boat Maintenance | Monthly launch / Annual service | SOLAS III/19.3.3.6, MSC.402(96) | Ship's crew (monthly) / Authorised provider (annual) | Monthly: launch with crew, manoeuvre, engine test. Annual: outboard serviced by approved mechanic, full sea trial, hull inspection. |
| Pyrotechnics Replacement | Before expiry (typically 3-4 years) | SOLAS III/6, LSA Code Ch.III | Ship's crew (check) / supply (replace) | Parachute rockets, hand flares, buoyant smoke signals. Check monthly. Replace before expiry date. Minimum 12 rockets on bridge, 2 per survival craft. |
| Life Raft Container & Cradle | Weekly visual / Monthly detailed | SOLAS III/20 | Ship's crew | Container: no damage, moisture ingress, or deformation. Cradle: quick-release hook functional. Lashing straps not chafed. HRU connected and within date. |
| 5-Year Complete Overhaul | 5 Years | MSC.402(96) | Authorised service provider / shore facility | Thorough examination of all components. Load testing. Wire fall renewal. Structural integrity assessment. Complete recertification. Detailed report. |
What PSC Inspectors Check First
Port State Control officers have a hierarchy of LSA items they verify — and the items that generate the most detentions are consistently the same. These are not obscure technicalities; they are the maintenance items most commonly missed.
2026 LSA Code Amendments: What Changed
Resolution MSC.554(108) introduces amendments to the LSA Code effective 1 January 2026, addressing lifeboat release mechanisms and launching appliance lowering speeds. These apply to equipment installed on or after 1 January 2026. Sign up for Marine Inspection to track compliance with new and existing requirements.
How Marine Inspection Manages LSA Compliance
Conclusion
Life-saving appliance maintenance is the shipboard discipline where the gap between compliance and competence is measured in lives — a lifeboat that launches successfully in a drill because the davit was load-tested, the release gear was operationally tested by an authorised service provider per MSC.402(96), the engine runs because it was tested monthly for a minimum 3 minutes, and the wire falls were renewed within the 5-year cycle. For inflatable life rafts, the 12-month maximum service interval at flag-state-approved stations, combined with 2-year HRU replacement (regardless of condition), pyrotechnic replacement before expiry, and container/cradle weekly visual checks form the maintenance chain that keeps survival craft deployment-ready. The 2026 LSA Code amendments (MSC.554(108)) add lowering speed formula requirements and release mechanism clarity for new installations. PSC enforcement is relentless on LSA items — on-load release hooks, HRU dates, raft service certificates, engine starts, pyrotechnic expiry, and Safety Equipment Certificate validity are verified at every boarding. Marine Inspection provides the digital platform that automates the entire LSA maintenance schedule, tracks certificates and expiry dates per equipment item, maintains 70+ item inspection checklists, and archives service provider records — book a live demo today.