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By: Dylan

**Unplanned downtime consumes approximately 11% of annual revenue for the world’s largest manufacturers, equivalent to roughly 1.4 trillion in annual losses.

Across the Global 2000 – spanning every sector, not just manufacturing – downtime costs 400 billion annually, equivalent to about 9% of profits (Splunk and Oxford Economics, The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024).

The cost per hour paints an even sharper picture: automotive manufacturers hemorrhage 2.3 million per hour of stopped production, while high – impact cross – industry IT outages now average 1.7 million per hour (New Relic, Observability Forecast for Financial Services 2026).

We aggregated data from Siemens, the Uptime Institute, Aberdeen Group, New Relic, Splunk, PagerDuty, Fluke, ABB, ITIC, Ponemon Institute, and dozens of other primary sources to compile this report.

As AI workloads strain infrastructure, cyber threats multiply, and just-in-time supply chains leave zero margin for error, the cost of unplanned downtime has become a board-level financial risk — not an operational inconvenience.

Key Takeaways:

  • $1.4 trillion — annual unplanned downtime cost for Fortune Global 500 manufacturers, equivalent to 11% of total revenue (Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024).
  • $400 billion — annual downtime cost across the Global 2000, or roughly 9% of profits (Splunk and Oxford Economics, The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024).
  • $260,000 per hour — average cost of unplanned downtime across all manufacturing sectors (Aberdeen Group; corroborated by Siemens and multiple 2025–2026 studies).
  • $2.3 million per hour — automotive manufacturing downtime cost, having doubled since 2019 (Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024).
  • 9,000 per minute — a derived cross-industry IT downtime estimate based on the Splunk/Oxford Economics Global 2000 figure; for context, the widely cited Gartner benchmark was $5,600 per minute in 2014.
  • 57% of data center operators say their most recent major outage cost more than 1 million (Uptime Institute, Annual Outage Analysis 2026).
  • 41% of mid-to-large enterprises report hourly downtime costs between 5 million (ITIC, 2025 Hourly Cost of Downtime Survey).
  • 68% of organizations lose more than 1 million per hour (PagerDuty, 2026 State of AI-First Operations Report).
  • 79% of maintenance teams saw unplanned downtime stay the same or increase over the past year, despite rising AI adoption (MaintainX, State of Industrial Maintenance 2026).
  • $852 million per week — weekly downtime losses across the global manufacturing sector (Fluke, 2025 Global Survey).
  • 800 hours per year — average equipment downtime per manufacturer (Deloitte; corroborated by multiple industry sources).
  • Only 5% of manufacturing downtime is caused by cyberattacks; operational failures — misconfigurations, network issues, and maintenance errors — dominate the rest (Macrium, State of Backup & Recovery in Manufacturing 2026).

1. The Trillion-Dollar Toll: Global Annual Downtime Costs

The aggregate cost of unplanned downtime now exceeds the GDP of most countries. Three independent research streams — Siemens’ manufacturing analysis, Splunk’s cross-industry survey with Oxford Economics, and the Uptime Institute’s longitudinal outage tracking — converge on a single conclusion: downtime has shifted from an operational nuisance to a structural drain on global productivity.

The 1.4 trillion manufacturing figure alone represents a substantial increase from 864 billion in 2019, outpacing both inflation and industrial output growth over the same period. Meanwhile, the $400 billion Global 2000 figure from Splunk captures the broader digital economy, where service degradation — not just total failure — now registers as a material event.

The chart below shows the annual cost of unplanned downtime globally, visualized across manufacturing and all-industry segments, with year-over-year trend lines from 2019 to 2026]

Metric

Value

Source

Fortune Global 500 annual unplanned downtime cost

$1.4 trillion (11% of revenue)

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

Global 2000 annual downtime cost (all sectors)

$400 billion (9% of profits)

Splunk & Oxford Economics, The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024

Global manufacturing annual downtime cost

~$253 billion

iFactory analysis aggregating Siemens and Aberdeen Group benchmarks, 2026

Global manufacturing weekly downtime losses

$852 million

Fluke, 2025 Global Survey (n=600)

UK & EU manufacturing annual downtime cost (2025)

>£80 billion

IDS-INDATA, 2025 Research (most recent available)

UK manufacturing weekly downtime cost

Up to £736 million

Fluke Corporation / Censuswide Survey 2026

U.S. manufacturing annual downtime losses

~$50 billion

Multiple corroborating sources; Aberdeen Group baseline

Average large plant annual downtime loss

$253 million

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

Increase in Fortune 500 downtime cost since 2019

Approx. +62% (from $864B baseline)

Siemens data across 2019 and 2024 editions of True Cost of Downtime

Note: The Siemens 1.4 trillion figure is specific to Fortune 500 manufacturers and includes both direct and indirect cost modeling. The Splunk / Oxford Economic 400 billion figure covers the broader Global 2000 across all sectors but focuses on unplanned digital/IT downtime. The two metrics are complementary, not contradictory — they measure overlapping but distinct cost surfaces.

2. Cost Per Hour by Industry: From FMCG to Automotive

The variance in hourly downtime cost across industries reveals where just-in-time production, regulatory exposure, and capital intensity concentrate financial risk. **Automotive manufacturing sits at the upper end of this cost range, incurring losses of up to 2.3 million per hour ** -a figure that has doubled since 2019 – driven by tightly coupled supply chains where a single stoppage cascades across dozens of Tier 1 and Tier 2 suppliers. At the opposite end, fast–moving consumer goods (FMCG) manufacturers lose approximately 36,000 per hour, reflecting lower per-unit margins and simpler production environments.

Between these poles sits the widely cited **260,000 – per – hour manufacturing average**, a figure validated by AberdeenGroup, Siemens, and multiple 2025-2026 corroborating studies. That average, however, masks enormous variance: semiconductor fabrication runs. 1.8 million per hour, pharmaceutical batch losses can reach 9 million per incident, and the oil and gas sector faces 250,000 to $500,000 per hour in direct production loss alone.

Below are the charts comparing hourly downtime cost across 10+ industries — automotive, semiconductor, pharmaceutical, oil & gas, financial services, general manufacturing, food processing, FMCG, and others.

1. Manufacturing Sectors

Industry

Hourly Downtime Cost

Change Since 2019

Source

Automotive

$2.3 million

2x increase

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

Semiconductor fabrication

$1.8 million

iFactory / Aberdeen Group analysis, 2026

Heavy industry (steel, chemicals)

Variable; ~$500,000+

4x increase

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

General manufacturing (cross-sector avg.)

$260,000

~50% increase

Aberdeen Group; corroborated by Siemens, multiple 2025–2026 sources

Oil & gas (upstream, including offshore)

250,000-500,000

Surged 76% (2021–2022)

Xenoss analysis; PetroHab operational data, 2026

Food processing

£18,000–£25,000

IDS-INDATA, 2025 Research (most recent available)

Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG)

$36,000

Zoidii, Maintenance Statistics Report 2026

Pharmaceuticals (per incident, batch loss)

Up to £5M/hr; $9M per batch write-off

IDS-INDATA, 2025; Oxmaint State of Manufacturing Maintenance 2025

2. IT and Service-Centric Industries

Industry

Hourly Downtime Cost

Source

Financial services IT (high-impact outages)

$1.8 million

New Relic, Observability Forecast for Financial Services 2026

Cross-industry IT (high-impact outages)

$1.7 million

New Relic, 2025 Observability Forecast

Retail & e-commerce (median critical outage)

$1 million

New Relic, Observability Forecast for Retail 2025

Healthcare IT (per-minute basis)

7,900/min (474,000/hr)

Ponemon Institute, 2025

Data center outage (cross-sector average, 2016)

8,851/min (531,060/hr)

Ponemon Institute / Emerson Network Power, 2016 (most recent available)

Small/mid-size business IT (cross-industry)

9,000/hr depending on size

Multiple sources; Gartner baseline $5,600/min (2014, most recent available)

One striking data point: Despite the 500,000 — and for 7% of respondents, the figure is even higher (ABB Motion Services / Sapio Research, 2025, n=3,600).

3. IT and Data Center Downtime

When a cloud region fails, an EHR goes dark, or a payment gateway stalls, the meter runs at thousands of dollars per minute. 

The aggregate 400 billion Global 2000 downtime figure equates to approximately 9,000 lost per minute of system failure — a cross-industry estimate that compares with the widely cited Gartner benchmark of 5,600 per minute in 2014.

For the largest enterprises, per-minute losses can exceed 23,750 during cloud outages. The Uptime Institute’s longitudinal data reveals a nuanced picture: while outage frequency per-site continues to decline slowly, the financial severity of the incidents that do occur keeps climbing. 

More than half (57%) of data center operators now report their most recent major outage cost over 100,000. And for the second consecutive year, one-fifth of respondents reported that the losses incurred from their most recent downtime incident with a significant impact exceeded 1 million.

The table below illustrates the per-minute cost of IT downtime for organizations of various sizes—ranging from small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to Fortune 1000 companies—and lists significant downtime incidents along with their total costs.

1. Per-Minute and Per-Hour IT Downtime

Metric

Value

Source

Derived cross-industry IT downtime cost per minute (based on $400B/yr)

~9,000 (540,000/hr)

Splunk & Oxford Economics, The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024; derived estimate

Gartner IT downtime cost per minute benchmark

5,600 (336,000/hr)

Gartner, 2014 (most recent available)

Data center outage cost per minute

$8,851

Ponemon Institute / Emerson Network Power, 2016 (most recent available)

Healthcare IT downtime cost per minute

7,900 (474,000/hr)

Ponemon Institute, 2025

Cloud outage cost per minute (most organizations)

$14,056

World Insurance, 2026

Cloud outage cost per minute (large enterprises)

$23,750

World Insurance, 2026

Fortune 1000 hourly downtime range

1M-5M+

Spin.AI analysis, 2026

Mid-to-large enterprise avg. hourly cost

$300,000+

ITIC, 2025 Hourly Cost of Downtime Survey

Enterprises reporting 1M-5M/hr losses

41%

ITIC, 2025 Survey

Mid/large enterprises reporting >$300K/hr

91%

ITIC, 2025 Survey

2: Major Outage Events and Their Price Tags

Event

Estimated Total Losses

Source

CrowdStrike Falcon outage (July 2024)

$5.4 billion (Fortune 500 alone)

Parametrix, 2024

CrowdStrike — healthcare sector losses

$1.94 billion

Parametrix, 2024

CrowdStrike — banking sector losses

$1.15 billion

Parametrix, 2024

AWS us-east-1 outage (Oct 2025)

500M – 650M (U.S. companies)

Parametrix, 2025

Meta global outage (2024)

~$100 million in revenue

Multiple reports

Amazon one-hour outage estimate

~$34 million in sales

Multiple analyses

The July 2024 CrowdStrike incident alone — where a faulty Falcon sensor update triggered approximately 8.5 million Windows system crashes globally — serves as a case study in concentrated digital fragility. A single misconfiguration cascaded across air travel, healthcare, and financial services in under 80 minutes. The $5.4 billion in Fortune 500 losses does not include costs absorbed by small businesses, government agencies, or non-U.S. entities.

4. Root Causes of Downtime

One of the most common misconceptions about downtime is that cyberattacks are the dominant cause. The data tells a different story.

In manufacturing, cyberattacks account for just 5% of primary downtime causes (Macrium, State of Backup & Recovery in Manufacturing 2026, n=verified IT/OT decision-makers across the US, Canada, and the UK). The real culprits are far more mundane: planned maintenance that goes wrong (18%), configuration changes or loss (16%), network failures (16%), and equipment failure, which accounts for 42% of all unplanned downtime in industrial settings.

In IT environments, cybersecurity incidents are responsible for 56% of downtime, while application or infrastructure issues account for the remaining 44% (Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024); within that latter category, misconfigurations and network failures are consistently cited as leading triggers by data center operators.

This is the “recovery gap” problem: organizations invest heavily in perimeter defense while underinvesting in the operational disciplines — configuration management, change control, backup testing — that determine how fast they recover from the incidents that inevitably occur.

The table tells the causes of downtime: equipment failure, human error, configuration changes, network failures, planned maintenance gone wrong, cyberattacks, and external factors — split across manufacturing and IT/cloud segments]

1. Manufacturing-Specific Causes:

Root Cause

Share of Downtime

Source

Equipment failure

42%

MaintainX / multiple industry sources

Human error

~23%

MaintainX / multiple industry sources

Planned maintenance gone wrong

18%

Macrium, 2026 (n=verified IT/OT decision-makers)

Configuration loss or change

16%

Macrium, 2026

Network failures

16%

Macrium, 2026

Cyberattacks / ransomware

5%

Macrium, 2026

2. IT and Cloud-Specific Causes:

Root Cause

Share of Outages

Source

Cybersecurity incidents (across all IT)

56%

Splunk & Oxford Economics, The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024

Application/infrastructure issues (across all IT)

44%

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Power failures (data centers)

Leading cause of impactful outages

Uptime Institute, Annual Outage Analysis 2026

Configuration errors (cloud environments)

Frequently cited as top trigger

Uptime Institute and industry incident retrospectives

Important methodological distinction: The Splunk/Oxford data covers all IT downtime across the Global 2000, where cybersecurity is indeed a major factor (56%). The Macrium data covers manufacturing production outages specifically, where physical equipment and operational errors dominate. Both findings are valid within their respective domains.

5. Frequency, Duration, and the Recovery Reality

Downtime isn’t just expensive — it’s frequent. The average manufacturer experiences 800 hours of equipment downtime per year, equivalent to more than two hours of lost production every single day (Deloitte; corroborated by multiple industry surveys).

While the number of incidents per plant has declined — from 42 per month in 2019 to 25 per month in 2024 — the duration and financial impact of each incident have grown.

Recovery is where organizations bleed the most: three-quarters of manufacturers report that it takes more than two hours to restore operations following an outage, costing upwards of $274,000 per incident (Macrium, 2026). In IT, human-error-triggered incidents stretch recovery time to 67–76 hours — two to three days of sleepless war rooms (Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024).

Below shows average downtime frequency per month, mean duration per incident, and recovery time benchmarks across manufacturing, IT, and healthcare sectors

Metric

Value

Source

Average annual equipment downtime per manufacturer

800 hours

Deloitte; corroborated by multiple industry sources

Average downtime incidents per plant per month (2024)

25 (down from 42 in 2019)

Zoidii / Siemens, 2026

Average hours lost per plant per month

27 (down from 39 in 2019)

Zoidii / Siemens, 2026

Manufacturers experiencing downtime at least annually

74%

Macrium, 2026

Companies experiencing equipment breakdowns at least monthly

44%

ABB Motion Services / Sapio Research, 2025 (n=3,600)

Companies experiencing breakdowns weekly

14%

ABB Motion Services / Sapio Research, 2025

Manufacturers taking 2+ hours to restore operations

75%

Macrium, 2026

Human-error-triggered MTTR (IT)

67–76 hours

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Average healthcare outage duration

95 minutes

Ponemon Institute, 2025

Retail median time to detect / resolve outages

30 min detect / 42 min resolve

New Relic, Observability Forecast for Retail 2025

Recovery insight: In well-drilled cloud operations teams, mean time to recovery can fall under one hour; in complex, multi-vendor environments with poor change discipline, it can exceed three hours. The median real-world recovery window sits between 2 and 4 hours for most major IT incidents.

6. Hidden Costs: What Never Appears on the Balance Sheet

The visible cost of downtime — lost production, emergency repairs, expedited parts — represents only the tip of the iceberg. Research consistently shows that hidden costs are 3 to 5 times larger than immediately visible losses (iFactory, 2026).

A 2026 PagerDuty survey of 1,000 business leaders and IT decision-makers found that beyond immediate revenue loss, downtime damages brand reputation (52%), introduces recovery costs (50%), reduces productivity (48%), and contributes to developer burnout (42%).

The Splunk/Oxford Economics study quantified downstream consequences with precision: stock prices drop an average of 2.5% following a major downtime event, revenue takes an average of 75 days to fully recover, and 74% of IT and engineering executives report delayed time-to-market as a direct result.

The chart below shows visible costs above the waterline (lost production, emergency repair labor, parts) and hidden costs below (brand damage, customer churn, regulatory penalties, stock price impact, delayed innovation, employee burnout)

Hidden Cost Category

Impact

Source

Brand reputation damage

52% of organizations report this

PagerDuty, 2026 State of AI-First Operations (n=1,000)

Recovery and remediation costs

50% of organizations report this

PagerDuty, 2026

Reduced productivity

48% of organizations report this

PagerDuty, 2026

Developer burnout

42% of organizations report this

PagerDuty, 2026

Stock price decline after major outage

2.5% average drop

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Revenue recovery timeline

75 days on average

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Delayed time-to-market

74% of IT/engineering execs affected

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Brand health recovery timeline

60 days on average

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024 (per CMO reports)

Hidden-to-visible cost ratio

3:1 to 5:1

iFactory analysis, 2026; multiple corroborating frameworks

The 2026 PagerDuty data also reveals a hardening of leadership awareness: 95% of respondents believe their leadership understands the competitive advantage gained from reducing incidents and speeding recovery. Downtime has completed its migration from the server room to the boardroom.

7. Predictive Maintenance and AI ROI

The market for predictive maintenance solutions is growing at a 29.4% CAGR — from 11.82 billion in 2025 to 15.29 billion in 2026 — because the ROI math is unambiguous. Documented deployments consistently report a 30–50% reduction in unplanned downtime, 18–25% lower maintenance costs, and 20–40% equipment lifespan extension (Oxmaint, 2026; corroborated by multiple PdM studies).

For every dollar invested in predictive maintenance, organizations recover approximately $7 in avoided costs. Yet the 2026 MaintainX State of Industrial Maintenance report contains a sobering counterpoint: despite rapid AI adoption, 79% of maintenance teams saw unplanned downtime stay the same or increase over the past year, and 39% of leaders (up from 31% in 2025) say downtime events are getting more expensive. Technology adoption without operational process change produces dashboards, not results.

Below chart comparing maintenance strategy outcomes — reactive vs. preventive vs. predictive — across downtime reduction, cost savings, and equipment lifespan metrics

Metric

Value

Source

Predictive maintenance market size 2026

$15.29 billion

Research and Markets, 2026

PdM market CAGR (2025→2026)

29.4%

Research and Markets, 2026

Unplanned downtime reduction from PdM

30–50%

Oxmaint; corroborated by multiple industry studies

Maintenance cost reduction from PdM

18–25%

Oxmaint; corroborated by multiple sources

Equipment lifespan extension from PdM

20–40%

Oxmaint; corroborated by multiple sources

ROI per $1 invested in PdM

~$7 return

Oxmaint, 2026

Equipment defect reduction with PdM vs. preventive

Up to 87%

MaintainX, 2025

Overall downtime reduction from proper maintenance programs

44%

CoastApp / multiple industry benchmarks

Emergency repair cost premium vs. planned

150–200%

Infodeck / multiple industry sources

Teams where downtime stayed same or increased

79%

MaintainX, State of Industrial Maintenance 2026 (n=1,700+)

Leaders saying downtime events are getting more expensive

39% (up from 31% in 2025)

MaintainX, 2026

Industrial companies with strategic modernization plans

55%

ABB Motion Services / Sapio Research, 2025

Of those facing weekly interruptions, actually implementing plans

Only ~20% (1 in 5)

ABB Motion Services / Sapio Research, 2025

Companies invested in digitalization but not fully integrated

70% invested; only 17% fully integrated

ABB Motion Services, 2025

The critical gap: More than a third of companies find it difficult to justify the ROI of modernization projects to senior leadership — despite the fact that upgrading obsolete equipment can generate ROI in under two years (ABB, 2025). The message is clear: spend on prevention, or pay exponentially more in reaction.

Summary Table: Unplanned Downtime Cost by the Numbers

Metric

Value

Source

Fortune 500 annual unplanned downtime cost

$1.4 trillion (11% of revenue)

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

Global 2000 annual downtime cost (all sectors)

$400 billion (9% of profits)

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Average manufacturing downtime cost per hour

$260,000

Aberdeen Group / Siemens / multiple

Automotive downtime cost per hour

$2.3 million (2x since 2019)

Siemens, True Cost of Downtime 2024

Semiconductor fabrication downtime per hour

$1.8 million

iFactory / Aberdeen Group, 2026

Derived cross-industry IT downtime per minute

~9,000(540,000/hr)

Derived from Splunk/Oxford $400B figure

Financial services high-impact IT outage per hour

$1.8 million

New Relic, 2026

Cross-industry high-impact IT outage per hour

$1.7 million

New Relic, 2025

Healthcare IT downtime per minute

7,900(474,000/hr)

Ponemon Institute, 2025

Data center outage per minute (2016, most recent)

$8,851

Ponemon Institute / Emerson Network Power

Organizations losing >$300K/hr during IT incidents

68%

PagerDuty, 2026

Organizations losing >$1M/hr during IT incidents

8%

PagerDuty, 2026

Mid/large enterprises reporting 1M – 5M/hr losses

41%

ITIC, 2025

Data center outages costing >$100K

57%

Uptime Institute, Annual Outage Analysis 2026

Data center outages costing >$1M

20% (1 in 5)

Uptime Institute, Annual Outage Analysis 2026

CrowdStrike 2024 total Fortune 500 losses

$5.4 billion

Parametrix, 2024

Global manufacturing weekly downtime losses

$852 million

Fluke, 2025

Average annual equipment downtime per manufacturer

800 hours

Deloitte / multiple sources

Manufacturers with 2+ hour recovery time

75%

Macrium, 2026

Equipment failure as cause of downtime

42%

MaintainX / multiple sources

Cyberattacks as cause of manufacturing downtime

5%

Macrium, 2026

Predictive maintenance unplanned downtime reduction

30–50%

Oxmaint / multiple PdM studies

Predictive maintenance market size 2026

$15.29 billion (29.4% CAGR)

Research and Markets, 2026

Stock price decline after major downtime event

2.5% average

Splunk & Oxford Economics, 2024

Teams where downtime unchanged or increased despite AI

79%

MaintainX, 2026

Methodology and Sources:

This report prioritizes primary data sources: original surveys, institutional research reports, and peer-reviewed studies. All statistics have been cross-referenced against at least one corroborating source where possible. Figures older than three years from the publication date are explicitly flagged as “most recent available.” Where sample sizes or survey methodologies introduce notable limitations (e.g., self-reported data, modest n-values), these are noted inline. Derived statistics — such as the $9,000-per-minute IT downtime estimate — are clearly labeled as calculations based on verified aggregate figures. Market sizing figures from commercial research firms are cross-referenced against at least one alternative estimate.

Primary sources cited in this report:

  • Siemens — True Cost of Downtime 2024 (white paper and survey data)
  • Splunk & Oxford Economics — The Hidden Costs of Downtime 2024 (n=2,000 executives, 53 countries, 10 industries)
  • Uptime Institute — Annual Outage Analysis 2026 (7th annual report); Annual Outage Analysis 2025; 2026 Data Center Resiliency Survey (n=1,035)
  • Aberdeen Group — Asset Performance Management research; downtime cost benchmarking studies
  • New Relic — Observability Forecast for Financial Services 2026 (n=156); 2025 Observability Forecast (cross-industry); Observability Forecast for Retail & eCommerce 2025 (n=147)
  • PagerDuty — 2026 State of AI-First Operations Report (n=1,000 business leaders, IT decision-makers, senior developers across 8 countries)
  • Fluke Corporation — 2025 Global Downtime Survey; Censuswide research (n=600+ senior decision-makers and maintenance professionals across US, UK, Germany)
  • ABB Motion Services — Modernization for Resilience Global Report 2025; Sapio Research survey (n=3,600 senior decision-makers)
  • ITIC — 2025 Hourly Cost of Downtime Survey; Calyptix/ITIC SMB Security Survey 2025
  • Ponemon Institute — Healthcare IT Downtime Cost Study 2025; Data Center Outage Cost Analysis 2016 (with Emerson Network Power)
  • Macrium — State of Backup & Recovery in Manufacturing 2026; Newton X research (verified IT/OT decision-makers across US, Canada, UK)
  • MaintainX — State of Industrial Maintenance 2026 (n=1,700+ maintenance professionals)
  • Zoidii — Maintenance Statistics Report 2026 (aggregating Siemens, Aberdeen, and independent benchmarks)
  • IDS-INDATA — True Cost of Manufacturing Downtime 2025 Research
  • Parametrix — CrowdStrike Outage Loss Estimates 2024; AWS Outage Loss Estimates 2025
  • Research and Markets — Predictive Maintenance Market Report 2026
  • Gartner — IT Downtime Cost Benchmark (2014, widely cited)
  • Deloitte — Manufacturing Outlook; Oil and Gas Industry Outlook 2026
  • Oxmaint — State of Manufacturing Maintenance 2025 Global Industry Report
  • iFactory — Unplanned Downtime Cost Prevention Guide 2026
  • Infodeck — State of Maintenance 2026 Report
  • World Insurance — Cloud Outage Cost Analysis 2026
  • Spin.AI — SaaS Outage Risk Analysis 2026
  • Xenoss — Industry Downtime Cost Benchmarks 2026

Last updated: May 2026. We update this page quarterly with the latest data.

 

Dylan
Dylan is a data protection specialist and a senior content writer at Information2 with more than 6 years of experience. His passion for writing and sharing data protection solutions such as data backup, replication, high availability and other technology information.

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