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First-Year AED Owner Roadmap — Month-by-Month

First-Year AED Owner Roadmap — Month-by-Month

First-Year AED Owner Roadmap — Month-by-Month

Year one of AED ownership separates programs that mature into defensible safety assets from programs that quietly stagnate. The work is light — most months take 15 to 30 minutes — but the cadence matters more than the workload. Programs that follow a structured month-by-month rhythm in year one almost universally pass their first annual audit. Programs that wing it almost universally don’t. This is the playbook.

Quick Answer

The first year of AED ownership runs on a monthly cadence anchored to a named program owner. Month 1: install, register, train. Months 2–3: build inspection cadence and draft the CERP. Months 4–6: first tabletop and live drills. Months 7–9: mid-year audit and insurance check. Months 10–12: annual program review and next-year budget. Total first-year time investment: approximately 20 hours across 12 months.

Why the first-year cadence matters more than the workload

Auditors and insurance carriers don’t measure how hard you worked. They measure whether you followed a documented cadence and whether your records prove it. A program that did the bare minimum every month consistently is more defensible than a program that did heroic work in months 1 and 12 and nothing in between.

The cadence also protects against owner turnover. If your designated program owner changes jobs in month 8, the new owner can pick up the rhythm because the rhythm is documented. Without cadence, every leadership change resets the program to zero.

The 12-month roadmap

Month 1 · Install, Register, Train

Mount the cabinet at an ADA-compliant 48–54″ height. Install ISO 7010 signage plus the perpendicular flag sign. Register with the state DPH and PulsePoint AED Registry. Schedule the first cohort of Heartsaver CPR/AED training through CPR1. Photograph the status indicator for your baseline reference.

Month 2 · Build the Monthly Inspection Cadence

First documented monthly inspection. Set up a shared-drive folder or labeled binder for log entries. Confirm the designated program owner is named by the individual + backup. Reference our AED inspection checklist for the cadence-by-frequency framework.

Month 3 · Draft the Cardiac Emergency Response Plan

Write the CERP covering trained responder names, AED locations, 911 protocol, EMS coordination, and post-event procedures. See our CERP template. Distribute to all designated responders. Required by 21 K-12 mandate; recommended for all facilities.

Month 4 · First Tabletop Drill

30-minute tabletop walk-through with designated responders. Run through one realistic cardiac arrest scenario from collapse to EMS handoff. Identify gaps in the CERP. Update document. Log the drill in your program records.

Month 5 · Insurance Broker Check

Email the AED program documentation. Confirm 1–3% premium credit application. Document the broker’s response in program records. See AED insurance coverage.

Month 6 · First Live Drill

Conduct a live drill in one zone of the facility. Time the response from “discovery” to AED-on-patient. Document both the time and any procedural friction. Debrief with responders and update the CERP based on lessons learned.

Month 7 · Quarterly Inspection Review

Verify all monthly inspections were logged. Check the pad and battery expiration forecast for the next 12 months. Pre-order consumables expiring within 90 days to capture bulk pricing.

Month 8 · Training Currency Review

Check the certification status of all designated responders. Schedule renewals for any cards expiring in the next 6 months. New-hire CPR/AED training coordinated through HR onboarding.

Month 9 · Outdoor / Seasonal Cabinet Check

For outdoor deployments — verify heated cabinet function before winter, check seal integrity, and replace UV-faded signage. For indoor — confirm cabinet alarm battery (9V) replaced annually.

Month 10 · Annual Compliance Self-Audit

Run the 47-point compliance self-audit checklist. Document findings. Close any gaps before the fiscal year-end. This is your dress rehearsal before any external audit.

Month 11 · Next-Year Budget Planning

Forecast next year’s consumables, training renewals, registration fees, and replacement device contributions. Submit to finance for the next year’s operational budget cycle.

Month 12 · Annual Program Review

Convene EHS + HR + Facilities + designated responders. Review program performance, drill outcomes, lessons learned, and insurance status. Sign updated CERP. File annual program review report.

Required documentation by the end of year 1

  • Twelve monthly inspection log entries with status indicator photos
  • Written CERP signed by the administration
  • Training records for all designated responders with current expiration dates
  • State DPH and PulsePoint registration confirmations
  • One tabletop drill record + one live drill record
  • Insurance broker review email + response
  • Annual self-audit findings and closure documentation
  • Next year’s budget was submitted to finance

Time investment summary

Phase Time
Month 1 install + register + train ~4–6 hours
Months 2–6 monthly cadence build + drills ~5–7 hours total
Months 7–11 quarterly reviews + planning ~3–4 hours total
Month 12 annual audit + review ~3–4 hours
Total year-1 ~15–20 hours

What changes in year 2 and beyond

Year 1 builds the foundation. Year 2 onward runs on the same cadence with less front-loaded work — about 10–15 hours per year. Renewal cycles for pads (every 2–5 years), battery (every 4–7 years), and certification (every 2 years) become the dominant capital and operational events.

Plan next year’s budget now

Project consumables, training, and replacement costs through year 10.

AED Cost of Ownership Calculator
Adjust the fields — costs update instantly
AED Device
Number of Units
Time Period
Cabinet
Device Cost
$1,944
Per unit
5-yr Consumables
$460
Pads × replacements + battery
Total Per Unit
$2,404
Over 5 years
Total All Units
$2,404
Including accessories

* Estimates based on standard pad replacement every 2 years and battery every 3–5 years. Always buy from authorised dealers to protect your warranty.

Common first-year program mistakes

  1. Skipping the calendar reminder. The Month 2 inspection is forgotten. Cadence is broken before it starts.
  2. No designated owner backup. Original owner leaves. The program goes silent.
  3. Generic CERP downloaded but not customized. Fails the “who specifically responds” test.
  4. Drills conducted but not logged. Audit-defensibility evaporates.
  5. The insurance broker is contacted only at renewal. Premium discount opportunity missed for year 1.
  6. Pads expiring in year 3 forgotten. Brand-new program goes red on the indicator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time does the first year of AED ownership actually take?

About 15–20 hours total across 12 months. Heaviest months are 1 (install) and 12 (annual audit) at 4–6 hours each.

What’s the single most important first-year task?

Name a designated program owner with a documented backup. Everything else cascades from that decision.

Do I really need a CERP in the first year?

Required in 21 K-12 mandate states. Recommended by the AHA for all public facilities. Best practice to draft in month 3.

When should I conduct the first live drill?

Month 6 typically — after tabletop walk-through (month 4) and any CERP refinements.

What documentation matters most for the annual audit?

Twelve consecutive monthly inspection logs, training records, registration confirmations, and CERP signed within the past year.

How do I know if my program owner is sufficiently engaged?

Monthly logs are timely (within 7 days of inspection date) and complete (status indicator photo + pad expiration + battery expiration recorded). Lapses indicate disengagement.

When does the calendar reminder for next year’s consumables go in?

At month 11, pre-order anything expiring within the next 90 days. Sets the cadence for years 2 onward.

What happens if I miss a monthly inspection?

Note the gap in the next entry with a brief explanation. Honesty in documentation is more defensible than fabrication.

How often should I review the CERP?

Annually at a minimum. Update after any actual deployment, facility change, or named responder change.

Should training renewals be in year 1 or year 2?

Year 2 (Heartsaver certifications are valid 2 years). But schedule the renewal in month 11 of year 1 to capture group pricing.

What if no one in the organization has time to be a program owner?

Then the organization can’t safely run an AED program. Reconsider the deployment or contract program management to a service like AEDTS.

Should I document every status indicator check?

Photograph monthly. Written log entry quarterly minimum. Daily glances don’t require documentation, but should happen.

How do I know my insurance broker engagement worked?

Written confirmation of premium credit applied to next renewal. Save the email in the program records.

What if the manufacturer issues a recall in year 1?

Follow the recall remedy instructions. Document in maintenance log. Most recalls resolve in 7–14 days through manufacturer cross-shipping. See AED Recall Tracker.

When does year 1 officially end?

At the month-12 annual program review meeting. Sign the updated CERP, file the annual report, and start year 2 with documented continuity.

Get your team certified the easy way.

CPR1 offers AHA-aligned Heartsaver, BLS, and pediatric CPR/AED courses for individuals and group fleet training.

Disclaimer: Roadmap is a starting framework. Adapt to facility-specific compliance, mandate requirements, and operational constraints.

Picture of ayaan
ayaan
In the last 27 years, I have worked as a first responder. For 20 of those years, I focused on instruction and training. I’ve collaborated with teams in nonprofits, businesses, government, healthcare, and aquatic fields. I help them improve their readiness for many emergency situations. I have helped organizations adopt effective emergency response strategies. I’ve combined hands-on experience with practical education. This lets me use lifesaving tools, such as automated defibrillators, in daily operations.
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