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Inspection Pack
A complete suite of services to ensure your property meets the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.
Official documentation certifying that your property's fire safety measures meet the required legal standards.
Learn MoreTailored assessments for HMOs, rental properties, and residential blocks to identify and mitigate fire hazards.
Learn MoreDetailed fire risk evaluations for offices, retail spaces, and warehouses, ensuring business continuity and safety.
Learn MoreProfessional installation and maintenance of smoke, heat, and carbon monoxide detectors to Grade A/D standards.
Learn MoreRegular servicing and certification of portable fire-fighting equipment to ensure they are ready when needed.
Learn MoreInspection of fire doors to ensure correct installation, smoke seals, and self-closing mechanisms are compliant.
Learn MoreFire safety for landlords carries serious importance in society. In England, among 600,185 incidents attended by FRSs in 2024, there were 136,702 fires—a decrease of 3.9% compared with the previous year. Such reduction of fire disaster could happen only due to the serious practice of fire safety regulations and responsibilities.
Therefore as a responsible landlord, it's your responsibility to understand the essential fire safety rules and regulations in order to fulfil them accordingly. It's your responsibility to ensure the well-being of your tenants and protect their investments.
The consequences of noncompliance with fire safety regulations can be quite serious. For example, not following the rules can lead to big fines, criminal penalties, or even losing your landlord license. Additionally, in extreme circumstances, local councils can take over buildings that are too dangerous to live in, prioritizing tenant safety first.
landlords don't need a special "Fire Safety Certificate" for normal rental homes. But Landlords must ensure the home is safe from fire. Here are the key things it covers:
Hiring a qualified assessor or from a safety certificates service
Conducting a comprehensive Fire Risk Assessment
Review of compliance against current regulations
Implementation of recommendations provided
Re-inspection if needed for serious issues
Certificate issued upon successful compliance
Landlords don't need to renew their fire safety certificate. However, they need to make sure that essential fire safety measures are checked and updated on a regular basis.
Ensuring properties meet fire safety standards is more than a legal duty—its a moral one. Heres what you must do.
Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms wherever necessary, ideally interlinked.
Providing safe and easily accessible routes clearly marked and unobstructed.
Maintaining fire doors and providing extinguishers in communal building areas.
Ensuring all systems are safe through regular professional inspections.
Running periodic inspections and documented fire risk assessments (FRA).
Staying compliant with all specific local fire authority regulations and licensing.
Fire risk assessments need to be kept up to date and reviewed regularly by qualified professionals. Routine inspections help identify hazards early. Assessments should be updated every 35 years, or sooner if property changes occur.
Install fire alarms on each floor and test them physically at the start of every new tenancy.
Inform tenants clearly to run their own functional checks for alarms on a weekly basis.
Ensure Carbon Monoxide alarms are installed in every room with solid fuel or gas appliances.
A fire risk assessment is a detailed inspection that identifies potential fire hazards, evaluates risks to occupants, and makes plans to reduce them.
Check appliances, wiring, and flammable materials.
Identify who is at risk: tenants, visitors, or groups.
Assess existing safety and highlight required improvements.
Maintain alarms, fire doors, and extinguishers properly.
Document all results and implement necessary changes.
Update assessments at least yearly or after property changes.
Landlords must follow the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. This includes the Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022 and the Housing Act 2004.
As per these regulations: landlords must provide smoke alarms on every floor, CO alarms in rooms with fuel-burning appliances, safe escape routes, and fire doors in HMOs.
HMO Essential
Fire Doors
Every Floor
Smoke Alarms
Care homes must comply with the Fire Safety Order 2005 and Care Quality Commission (CQC) standards.
Compliance with BS 5266. Monthly function tests and annual full-duration tests required for corridors, stairwells, and exits to guide residents safely.
Landlords of Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) have additional responsibilities under the Management of HMOs (England) Regulations.
Install fire doors with self-closing devices on all rooms opening onto escape routes.
Provide emergency lighting along all escape routes for visibility during power failures.
Ensure escape routes provide at least 30 minutes of fire-resistant construction.
Install interlinked detection (Grade A in larger HMOs) covering all communal spaces.
Keeping communal areas clear of obstructions and fire hazards at all times.
Display clear fire safety instructions, evacuation procedures, and contacts.
Providing extinguishers and fire blankets as required by the risk assessment.
Legally appointing a person (landlord/agent) for safety compliance in shared areas.
Smoke alarms on every floor and CO alarms in rooms with fuel-burning appliances.
Full alarm systems meeting BS 5839: control panels, zoned detection, and manual call points.
Detect fast-flaming fires through microscopic smoke particles quickly.
Sense slow, smouldering fires using advanced infrared light detection.
Ideal for kitchens; respond directly to rapid temperature rises.
Triggers all alarms when one activates, ensuring building-wide coverage.
For solid materials like wood, paper, and textiles. Essential in corridors.
For electrical fires and flammable liquids. Crucial near kitchens/panels.
Versatile for multiple fire classes but leaves significant indoor residue.
MUST be kept near high-risk nodes (kitchens) and clear escape routes.
Pulling the pin to unlock the extinguisher for use.
Aiming the nozzle at the base of the fire, not the flames.
Squeezing the handle to release the agent steadily.
Sweeping side to side at the fire base until extinguished.
Fire doors must comply with Building Regulations Approved Document B and the Fire Safety Order 2005. Failure to meet these standards carries severe consequences.
Non-compliance leads to heavy fines, legal action, or imprisonment. It also invalidates insurance and increases risk of preventable injury during fire events.
Failing to follow fire safety regulations can lead to big fines, criminal penalties, or even losing your landlord license. Local councils can take over buildings that are unsafe.
Running periodic checks to see if fire safety rules are being followed, especially in HMOs.
Formal notices requiring issues (like blocked escape routes) to be resolved within a specific timeframe.
In severe cases, authorities can prohibit people from using an unsafe property entirely.
Expert answers to common landlord fire safety queries.
It is recommended that fire risk assessments are reviewed at least annually, or immediately after any significant changes to the buildings layout, its use, or the number of occupants.
For residential rentals, a minimum of one smoke alarm on every floor and a carbon monoxide alarm in any room with a solid fuel-burning appliance is required. For HMOs, more sophisticated interconnected systems (Grade A or D) are typically mandatory.
Following the Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022, landlords of multi-occupied residential buildings with at least two sets of domestic premises must conduct annual checks of flat entrance doors and quarterly checks of all fire doors in common parts.
Expert fire alarm installation across London. Fully certified, compliant, and starting from just £210 per alarm.