Calculator Overview
This tool helps construction teams measure how effectively corrective actions are being closed within a reporting period. It compares opened items, closed items, overdue backlog, on-time completion, target achievement, and open backlog remaining.
Enter Project Corrective Action Data
Example Data Table
Use this sample to understand weekly corrective action movement on a construction site.
| Week | Opened | Closed | Closed On Time | Closed Late | Total Available | Ending Open |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 1 | 14 | 3 |
| Week 2 | 11 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 16 | 4 |
| Week 3 | 7 | 8 | 6 | 2 | 15 | 3 |
| Week 4 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 1 | 16 | 2 |
Formula Used
Closure Rate = (Closed This Period ÷ Opened This Period) × 100
Closure Rate = (Closed This Period ÷ Total Available Actions) × 100
Total Available = Carry Forward Open + Opened This Period
Ending Open = Total Available Actions − Closed This Period
On-Time Rate = (Actions Closed On Time ÷ Closed This Period) × 100
Overdue Backlog Rate = (Overdue Open Actions ÷ Ending Open Actions) × 100
In construction reporting, a higher closure rate generally signals better follow-through on inspections, audits, safety findings, quality punch items, and nonconformance corrective actions. Pair the rate with backlog and overdue trends for a balanced interpretation.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the reporting period and project name.
- Type the number of open actions carried into the period.
- Add newly opened corrective actions for the same period.
- Enter the number of actions closed during that period.
- Split closed actions into on-time and late closures.
- Enter the count of overdue actions still open.
- Add target closure rate, average close days, and inspections.
- Click the calculate button to view results, chart, and export options.
FAQs
1. What is a corrective action closure rate?
It measures how many corrective actions were closed during a reporting period compared with actions opened or available. It helps construction teams judge response effectiveness, follow-up discipline, and backlog control.
2. Why should construction teams track overdue open actions?
Overdue actions reveal unresolved risks. A low overall closure rate may be manageable, but overdue backlog often signals delayed safety, quality, or compliance follow-through that can affect site performance and audits.
3. Which closure rate is better, versus opened or versus available?
Both are useful. Versus opened shows whether the team is keeping up with new issues. Versus available shows how quickly the whole backlog is being reduced, including carried-forward actions.
4. What does on-time closure rate tell me?
It shows the share of completed corrective actions closed by their required due dates. This is valuable for construction projects where delayed actions can affect inspections, handover readiness, or compliance results.
5. Can the closure rate exceed 100%?
Yes. If the team closes more actions than were opened during the same period, the rate versus opened can exceed 100%. That usually means backlog was reduced successfully.
6. What target closure rate should I use?
Targets depend on the project and reporting culture. Many teams use 80% to 95%, but the best target balances realistic field capacity, due-date discipline, and backlog reduction goals.
7. Why include average close days in the calculator?
Average close days adds time-based context. Two projects can show identical closure rates, yet the one with fewer closure days is usually responding faster to issues and reducing exposure sooner.
8. How can I improve corrective action closure performance?
Prioritize overdue items, assign clear owners, review due dates weekly, remove approval bottlenecks, and track trends by discipline or contractor. Consistent field follow-up usually improves closure speed and target achievement.