Airbnb Hosts Need To Be Fire Safety Compliant?

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If you run a holiday let (short-term rental) in the UK, you must follow fire safety rules under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. The person responsible (usually the owner or manager) must ensure guests are safe from fire risks.

Below is a practical guide to making your holiday let fire-safety compliant.


1. Carry Out a Fire Risk Assessment

You are legally required to do a fire risk assessment.

This means you must:

Identify fire hazards (electrical items, cooking equipment, heaters).

Identify people at risk (guests, children, disabled guests).

Reduce or remove risks.

Record your findings (recommended even if small property).

Review regularly.

Typical hazards to check:

Overloaded plug sockets

Faulty appliances

Candles or open flames

Blocked exits

If you’re unsure, you can hire a professional fire risk assessor.


2. Install Smoke and Heat Alarms

You must install alarms that meet UK standards.

Recommended setup:

Smoke alarms

One on each floor

In hallways and landing areas

Heat alarm

In the kitchen (instead of smoke to avoid false alarms)

Good practice:

Use interlinked alarms (when one sounds, all sound).

Test alarms between guest stays.


3. Provide Fire Fighting Equipment

Most UK holiday lets should provide basic fire equipment.

Typical requirements:

Fire blanket

In the kitchen

Fire extinguisher

Usually a 1–2 kg dry powder or foam extinguisher

Located in the kitchen or near exit routes

Important:

Equipment should be serviced annually.

Guests should not be expected to fight fires, but equipment can help with small incidents.


4. Provide Clear Escape Routes

Guests must be able to escape quickly.

Requirements:

At least one clear escape route from every room.

Doors and hallways must not be blocked.

Windows should open easily if used as escape routes.

Keys should be easy to find (avoid locked exits).

For larger properties, emergency lighting may be needed.


5. Display Fire Safety Information

Provide simple instructions for guests.

Example information to display:

What to do if there is a fire

How to exit the property

Emergency contact numbers

Where the meeting point is

This can be placed:

in the welcome folder

on the back of bedroom doors


6. Electrical and Gas Safety

To reduce fire risk, you should also ensure:

Electrical safety

Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR) every 5 years

Portable appliances checked regularly (PAT testing recommended)

Gas safety

Annual inspection by a Gas Safe engineer

Gas Safety Certificate


7. Furniture and Furnishings Regulations

All furniture must comply with the Furniture and Furnishings (Fire Safety) Regulations 1988.

This means:

Sofas, mattresses, cushions must be fire-resistant.

Items should have fire safety labels.


8. Carbon Monoxide Protection

Install carbon monoxide alarms if you have:

gas boilers

log burners

fireplaces

solid fuel stoves

place alarms near sleeping areas

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