Veryon has announced that it will unveil two new solutions—Veryon Work Center and Veryon GSE—at MRO Americas in Orlando (21–23 April), marking a significant expansion of its digital maintenance ecosystem. Both products evolve from the EBIS platform acquired from Tronair last year and are positioned to enhance Veryon’s end-to-end fleet and asset management offering.
The launch builds directly on Veryon’s existing Tracking and Tracking+ capabilities, adding a more comprehensive operational layer that integrates work orders, quoting, parts management, and inventory control. The Work Center platform is tailored primarily for North American Part 145 repair stations, A&P shops, service centres, FBOs, and OEMs, providing a centralised environment for managing maintenance workflows. Meanwhile, Veryon GSE extends oversight to ground support equipment, addressing the needs of Part 121 airlines, airports, and global ground handling providers.
Chief Executive Bethany Little emphasised that the solutions respond to mounting industry pressures, where operators must manage increasingly complex operations with constrained resources. The platforms aim to simplify workflows while improving visibility across both aircraft maintenance and ramp operations.
Veryon Work Center consolidates planning, execution, and documentation into a single digital system, covering areas such as labour tracking, scheduling, compliance, invoicing, and recordkeeping. This integration enables maintenance teams to operate more efficiently while maintaining audit readiness. Early user feedback highlights tangible productivity gains, with one operator noting the system can effectively replace several administrative roles, delivering both time and cost savings.
Complementing this, Veryon GSE introduces centralised management of ground equipment, offering real-time insight into asset status, maintenance schedules, and parts availability. This helps reduce downtime and ensures equipment readiness aligns with flight operations, a critical factor for high-frequency airline environments.
Both solutions are unified within Veryon’s broader platform, underpinned by shared data and workflows. At its core is Veryon AIRE, an AI-driven engine trained on over 100 million maintenance events. This capability enables predictive insights, faster fault identification, and more confident decision-making.
By linking the entire maintenance lifecycle into a cohesive, intelligent system, Veryon aims to reduce inefficiencies, enhance operational visibility, and ultimately keep aircraft—and supporting equipment—performing reliably.





















