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Taxiway Checklist Software

Taxiway checklist software for airside operations teams digitising self-inspection checklists covering markings, holding-position signs, lighting, FOD, and shoulders on mobile.

Quick Answer

Taxiway checklist software is the platform airside operations teams use to run digital self-inspection checklists and keep defensible records across the system. Inspectly360 turns the taxiway check into a standard mobile checklist covering paint markings, holding-position signs, guidance signs, edge and centreline lighting, FOD, and shoulders, with each completed round stored in one record aligned to ICAO Annex 14 and FAA 14 CFR Part 139.

AI-Powered Features for Your Field Workflows

Everything your field team does on paper, Inspectly360 does automatically: faster, more accurate, and without the admin.

Take a Photo. AI Fills the Form illustration

Take a Photo. AI Fills the Form

Your inspector takes a photo of any asset or defect. AI reads it and fills the inspection form automatically. No typing. No manual entry.

Speak. AI Writes It Down illustration

Speak. AI Writes It Down.

Inspectors speak their observations in any language. AI transcribes and fills the form in real time. Completely hands-free in the field.

Inspections Done. Report Ready illustration

Inspections Done. Report Ready.

The moment an inspection is submitted, a branded PDF, Excel, or CSV report generates automatically. No manual work. No waiting.

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Connect Your Existing Tools.

Inspectly360 integrates with the tools your team already uses, including Zoho, Microsoft 365, and SAP. No double entry.

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Live Dashboard. Every Site. Always On.

Your operations team sees completion rates, open issues, and compliance scores across all sites in real time. No chasing updates.

Before and After Inspectly360

What changes once taxiway checklist software runs on one mobile-first platform with photo proof and live dashboards.

Before Inspectly360

  • Each duty officer runs the taxiway check differently, so items get skipped under time pressure.
  • A failed item is noted in words with no photo, so the severity is impossible to judge later.
  • A defect found on a paper round is written down but may never reach maintenance as an action.
  • Whether the taxiway check was actually done is assumed until a gap is found later.
  • Completed paper checklists pile up in a folder and are hard to search when records are needed.

After Inspectly360

  • A standard digital checklist guides every round so signs, markings, lighting, and FOD are always covered.
  • A failed checklist item requires a photo, so the condition is evidenced, not just described.
  • A failed item becomes a routed defect with an owner and deadline straight from the checklist.
  • Each scheduled checklist shows complete, late, or missed so the duty manager sees coverage at a glance.
  • Every completed checklist is stored, timestamped, and searchable per taxiway and date in seconds.

What Is Taxiway Checklist Software, and How Do Airside Teams Use Digital Self-Inspection Checklists?

Taxiway checklist software is the platform airside operations teams use to run digital self-inspection checklists and keep defensible records across the system. Inspectly360 turns the taxiway check into a standard mobile checklist covering paint markings, holding-position signs, guidance signs, edge and centreline lighting, FOD, and shoulders, with each completed round stored in one record aligned to ICAO Annex 14 and FAA 14 CFR Part 139.327.

Today the taxiway check is a paper checklist that each duty officer runs slightly differently, a failed item is noted in words with no photo, and the completed sheets pile up in a folder. When an item is skipped under time pressure, a defect written on a round never reaches maintenance, or someone needs to prove the check happened, the paper trail does not answer quickly. Across duty shifts, coverage is assumed rather than shown, so the operations manager cannot confirm every scheduled check was actually completed.

Inspectly360 replaces that with mobile capture on iOS and Android: a standard checklist guides every round so items are not skipped, a failed item requires a photo and becomes a routed defect with an owner, and each scheduled checklist shows complete, late, or missed. Completed checklists are stored, timestamped, and searchable per taxiway and date when a record is needed.

  • FAA 14 CFR Part 139.327 requires certificated airports to inspect the airfield and keep records, which a digital checklist supports: 14 CFR 139.327
  • ICAO Annex 14 sets the taxiway standards that self-inspection checklists are built around: ICAO Annex 14

How Does a Taxiway Checklist Run from a Mobile Round to a Logged Defect and Record?

Airside operations teams follow this loop for taxiway self-inspection checklists, defect routing, and the record.

  1. 1

    Build the Taxiway Checklist

    Set a standard self-inspection checklist covering markings, holding-position and guidance signs, lighting, FOD, and shoulders so every round is consistent.

  2. 2

    Run the Round on Mobile

    Duty staff work through the checklist on mobile, passing or failing each item, even offline across the taxiway system.

  3. 3

    Capture Evidence on a Fail

    On every taxiway checklist cycle, A failed item requires a photo, so the condition is evidenced and the severity can be judged rather than guessed.

  4. 4

    Route Defects to an Owner

    For Aviation teams running taxiway checklist, each failed item becomes a routed defect with an owner and deadline so it reaches maintenance, not just the page.

  5. 5

    Store and Track Completion

    In Aviation taxiway checklist operations, each completed checklist is stored and timestamped, and the schedule shows complete, late, or missed at a glance.

How Should an Airport Pilot Digital Taxiway Checklists Before Rolling Them Out to Every Taxiway?

Answers to common long-tail questions, kept on one canonical page to avoid thin duplicate URLs.

Pilot on One Taxiway Group

Start with one group of taxiways so the checklist items, fail-evidence rules, and defect routing are validated against the airport's real self-inspection routine before rollout to the rest of the system, runways, and aprons.

Access and Roles

Duty staff get checklist capture, maintenance gets the routed defects, and the operations manager gets the completion and coverage view per taxiway through role-based access.

Which Capabilities Help Teams Run Consistent Taxiway Self-Inspection Checklists?

The platform capabilities that power taxiway checklist software across every site.

Standard Checklist Templates

A consistent self-inspection checklist covers markings, signs, lighting, FOD, and shoulders. Why it matters: a standard checklist stops items being skipped under time pressure on a busy duty shift.

Mandatory Fail Evidence

For taxiway checklist field teams, A failed item requires a photo before the round can continue. Why it matters: a defect described in words alone cannot be triaged for severity the way a photo allows.

Defect Routing

Across multi-site taxiway checklist rounds, each failed item becomes a routed defect with an owner and deadline. Why it matters: a defect that stays on the checklist page never gets fixed, while a routed one reaches maintenance.

Completion Tracking

Each scheduled checklist shows complete, late, or missed. Why it matters: assumed coverage is the gap a self-inspection audit exposes across the taxiway system.

Offline Capture

Checklists run fully offline and sync on reconnection. Why it matters: a taxiway round cannot wait for signal, so the check must work in low-coverage areas.

Searchable Digital Records

Completed checklists are stored, timestamped, and searchable per taxiway and date. Why it matters: a record found in seconds replaces a folder of paper sheets nobody can search.

Ready to Move Taxiway Checklist Off Paper?

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How Is This Different from Paper Checklists, Spreadsheet Forms, and Photo Trails?

Airside operations teams comparing Inspectly360 to paper checklists, spreadsheet forms, and WhatsApp photo trails see the difference fastest on consistent self-inspection items, mandatory photo capture, defect routing from a checklist, completion tracking, and digital record-keeping aligned to ICAO Annex 14 and FAA 14 CFR Part 139.327.

TopicTypical GapsWith Inspectly360
Consistent self-inspection itemsEach duty officer runs the taxiway check differently, so items get skipped under time pressure.A standard digital checklist guides every round so signs, markings, lighting, and FOD are always covered.
Mandatory photo captureA failed item is noted in words with no photo, so the severity is impossible to judge later.A failed checklist item requires a photo, so the condition is evidenced, not just described.
Defect routing from a checklistA defect found on a paper round is written down but may never reach maintenance as an action.A failed item becomes a routed defect with an owner and deadline straight from the checklist.
Completion trackingWhether the taxiway check was actually done is assumed until a gap is found later.Each scheduled checklist shows complete, late, or missed so the duty manager sees coverage at a glance.
Digital record-keepingCompleted paper checklists pile up in a folder and are hard to search when records are needed.Every completed checklist is stored, timestamped, and searchable per taxiway and date in seconds.

What Changes for the Airside Operations Manager, Operations Duty Manager, and Airside Team?

What changes once taxiway checklist software is standardised on Inspectly360.

  • Airside Operations Manager: A clear view of which taxiway checks are complete, late, or missed without chasing each duty shift.
  • Operations Duty Manager: A standard checklist that stops items being skipped and routes every failed item to an owner.
  • Airside Operations Team: A guided round on mobile that takes minutes and evidences every failed item with a photo.
  • Airfield Maintenance Manager: Defects from the taxiway checklist arriving as routed actions, not notes on a paper sheet.

Which Taxiway Checklist Templates Should You Start With?

Get started with inspection and audit checklist templates.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Taxiway Checklist Software

What does taxiway checklist software actually digitise?

It turns the taxiway self-inspection from a paper checklist into a standard mobile workflow. The checklist covers the items a duty officer checks on every round: paint markings, holding-position and guidance signs, edge and centreline lighting, FOD, and shoulder condition. Each item is passed or failed on the phone, a failed item requires a photo, and the completed round is stored and timestamped against the taxiway. This means the same items are covered every time rather than each officer running the check slightly differently. The value is consistency and a searchable record: instead of a folder of paper sheets, the airport has every completed taxiway checklist stored per date and ready to produce when a self-inspection record is needed.

How does it stop items being skipped during a busy round?

The checklist guides the duty officer through every item in order, so nothing is left to memory under time pressure on the taxiway system. Where an item is critical, such as a holding-position sign, the checklist can require a response before the round can be completed, which prevents a skipped item passing unnoticed. A failed item requires a photo, so it cannot be glossed over. This matters because the point of a self-inspection is consistency: a taxiway check that covers signs one day and forgets lighting the next is exactly the inconsistency a Part 139.327 program is meant to remove. A guided digital checklist makes every round cover the same ground regardless of who is on shift.

Does the platform work offline on the taxiway system?

Yes. Checklists run fully offline on iOS and Android, because a taxiway round cannot wait for signal across a large system or during night operations. Duty staff complete the checklist and capture photos while offline, and the completed round syncs automatically once the device reconnects. The timestamp reflects when the round was actually done, not when it synced, which keeps the self-inspection record accurate. Nothing is lost when a check is completed in a no-coverage area. This reliability is essential, because a checklist that fails when signal drops would push staff back to paper and defeat the purpose of digitising the round, especially across the more remote parts of the taxiway system.

What happens when an inspector fails a checklist item?

A failed item requires a photo and then becomes a routed defect with an owner and a deadline, so it leaves the checklist and reaches maintenance as a tracked action. This closes the common gap where a defect is written on a paper round but never turns into work that someone owns. The duty officer can add a note on severity and location, and the defect carries its photo evidence so maintenance can triage it without a second visit. The result is that a taxiway checklist is not just a record that a check happened; it is the start of a defect's lifecycle, with every failed item followed from the round to a verified fix rather than left on the page.

How does it show whether every scheduled taxiway check was done?

Each scheduled checklist shows as complete, late, or missed, so the operations manager sees coverage across the taxiway system at a glance rather than assuming a round happened. If a round is missed, it is visible immediately rather than discovered later when a problem surfaces. This completion view matters for a self-inspection program, because the regulator expects evidence not just that checks are defined but that they are actually being done on schedule. Instead of leafing through a folder to confirm a round took place, the manager has a live picture of which taxiway checks are current and which need attention, which makes coverage a fact rather than a hope across every duty shift.

Can we keep our own checklist items and structure?

Yes. The checklist is built around the airport's own taxiway self-inspection items and structure rather than a fixed template, so it reflects how the airfield actually runs its rounds. You set the items, the order, which ones require a photo or a mandatory response, and how failed items route to maintenance. During the pilot on one taxiway group, these are validated against the real self-inspection routine before rollout to other surfaces. This means staff recognise the digital checklist as their own check, just faster and with evidence and routing built in, rather than a generic form imposed on them. Familiarity drives adoption, and adoption is what makes the record complete and trustworthy.

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