In simple terms, fire safety compliance is the ongoing work of identifying fire risk, reducing it, and proving you’ve done it. It’s not a one-off certificate. It’s risk assessments, maintenance, records, communication, and follow-through.
Key takeaways
- Fire safety compliance is a live duty, not a document you file and forget.
- In England and Wales, the main legal framework is the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, and it applies to most non-domestic premises, including common parts of blocks of flats and HMOs.
- Responsibility usually sits with the “Responsible Person” (often the employer, owner, landlord, or managing agent), and you cannot simply pass that legal duty to a contractor.
- England has extra requirements for many residential blocks under the Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022, including regular fire door checks and, for high-rise buildings, information for fire and rescue services.
- Scotland and Northern Ireland have different legislation and different labels for the dutyholder, but the core expectation is the same: assess risk, put controls in place, and maintain them.
What fire safety compliance means in practice
Fire safety compliance is what you do to make sure people can escape safely, and a fire can be contained long enough for evacuation and response.
In operational terms, it usually breaks down into five areas:
- Assess risk (and review it when things change)
- Prevent fires from starting (controls, housekeeping, safe systems)
- Protect people and the building (detection, compartmentation, fire doors, lighting, signage)
- Plan for what happens if there’s a fire (evacuation strategy, resident and staff instructions, drills where relevant)
- Prove it (records, inspection evidence, maintenance logs, actions closed out)
That “prove it” piece is where many organisations get caught out. The work might be happening, but the evidence is scattered. If you want to get a better operational view of managing this across a housing portfolio, you can check out how True Compliance manages this through our Fire Safety Compliance stream.
The UK legal landscape (and why it can feel confusing)
The UK’s “fire safety law” is really three different sets of legislation:
England and Wales
The core legislation is the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (the “Fire Safety Order”). It covers most non-domestic premises, including workplaces and the common parts of multi-occupied residential buildings.
Since Grenfell, the scope and expectations have been tightened and clarified, including through the Fire Safety Act 2021and further related updates.
Scotland
Fire safety duties sit mainly under the Fire (Scotland) Act 2005 and associated regulations, with dutyholders defined and enforced differently from England and Wales. A sensible starting point is the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service business and landlord guidance if you’re based in Scotland.
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland uses its own framework, including the Fire and Rescue Services (Northern Ireland) Order 2006 and the Fire Safety Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2010. The Northern Ireland Fire & Rescue Service guides are a good palce to start if you’re based in Northern Ireland.
Who is responsible for fire safety compliance?
England and Wales: the “Responsible Person”
Under the Fire Safety Order, there will be an identifiable ‘Responsible Person’. In workplaces, that’s typically the employer (if they have control of the premises). Where there isn’t an employer, it’s often the owner or the person in control (or both). The legal definition is set out in Article 3 of the Fire Safety Order.
Two points that matter in the real world:
- You can have more than one Responsible Person in the same building, especially where responsibilities are split (for example, landlord for common parts, commercial tenant for their unit). In those cases, cooperation and coordination are expected. The Home Office guide spells this out clearly in their guide for people with duties under fire safety legislation.
- You can appoint competent help, but you can’t outsource the legal duty. Even if a managing agent or contractor does the work, accountability for compliance stays with the Responsible Person.
Scotland: “Duty Holders”
Scotland’s legislation defines those responsible as dutyholders. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service describes this in more detail in their business advice and guidance.
Northern Ireland: the “appropriate person” in control
Northern Ireland’s regulations focus on the people with control of relevant premises and their duty to assess and manage fire risk, under the Fire Safety Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2010.
What does the Responsible Person actually have to do?
The exact requirements vary by building type, but the backbone in England and Wales is:
- Carry out a suitable and sufficient fire risk assessment and keep it under review. (see Article 9 of the Fire Safety Order)
- Put in place “general fire precautions” identified by the assessment.
- Maintain fire safety measures (alarms, emergency lighting, extinguishers where required, compartmentation, signage, etc.).
- Manage fire doors and means of escape, including keeping escape routes usable and protected.
- Provide relevant fire safety information to people who need it (staff, residents, contractors and visitors depending on the setting).
If you are in the social housing sector, the potential areas where you are vulnerable are very predictable: outdated FRA actions, unclear ownership of tasks, incomplete evidence trails, and difficulty proving the current status across hundreds or thousands of assets.
Extra duties for many residential blocks in England (and why they matter)
The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 add specific duties for Responsible Persons in certain multi-occupied residential buildings.
Here are a few examples:
- Fire door checks (buildings over 11 metres): you need to perform quarterly checks of fire doors in common areas and annual checks of flat entrance doors on a ‘best endeavours’ basis. For more information, you can read the official fire doors fact sheet (regulation 10) and the government’sfire door guidance.
- High-rise requirements (existing high-rise residential buildings): duties include wayfinding signage and secure information boxes, intended to support fire and rescue services during an incident. You can find more information about these in the government’s wayfinding signage fact sheet (regulation 8) and secure information box fact sheet (regulation 4).
Who enforces fire safety compliance, and what happens if you get it wrong?
In England and Wales, fire and rescue authorities are the main enforcing bodies for the Fire Safety Order, supported by enforcement guidance.
Non-compliance can lead to formal notices, prosecution, and serious reputational damage. The Order includes specific offences for failures that put people at risk.
A practical checklist for landlords and housing providers
If you want a quick “are we basically covered?” sense-check, start here:
- Confirm who the Responsible Person is for each building (and for each part of a building).
- Make sure every building has a current FRA and a clear review cycle.
- Track FRA actions to completion, with named owners and due dates.
- Keep evidence like inspection logs, servicing certificates, remedial works, and photos where useful.
- Implement the local duties where applicable (e.g. in England – 11m+ door checks, high-rise information requirements).
- Make resident-facing instructions easy to find and easy to follow.
- Stress-test your contractors with competence checks, scope, reporting quality, and turnaround times.
- Run periodic internal audits so you find the gaps before an enforcing officer does.
