Approved Document J: Combustion Appliances, Ventilation & Flue Requirements

Quick Answer: Approved Document J (Part J) covers the installation of combustion appliances — boilers, fires, stoves, cookers, and generators — in new and existing buildings. Key requirements: adequate air supply for combustion and room ventilation; safe flue system to discharge products of combustion outside; carbon monoxide (CO) alarm in the same room as the appliance. For gas appliances, Gas Safe registration covers compliance with Part J provisions on flues and ventilation. For solid fuel and oil appliances, HETAS and OFTEC respectively. A notifiable solid fuel appliance installation always requires Building Control notification.

Summary

Part J of the Building Regulations sets the rules for heat-producing appliances in buildings. It is the document that governs when chimneys, flues, and ventilation must be provided, and how. Understanding Part J is essential for heating engineers, solid fuel installers, gas engineers, and builders constructing rooms that will contain combustion appliances.

The most significant recent changes relate to carbon monoxide alarms (now mandatory for virtually all new combustion appliance installations) and the provisions for high-efficiency appliances with balanced or room-sealed flue arrangements.

For tradespeople, the key principle is that an appliance needs three things: fuel, oxygen, and a way to get rid of the combustion products. Part J tells you how to provide the second and third elements safely.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Appliance Type Required Registration Building Control Notification CO Alarm Required?
Gas boiler/fire (new install or replacement) Gas Safe Via competent person (Gas Safe) Yes (from 2022 in England)
Oil boiler (new install) OFTEC (recommended; self-cert) Via OFTEC OR Building Control Yes (from 2022 in England)
Solid fuel stove/fire HETAS (recommended; self-cert) HETAS notify OR submit to Building Control Yes (mandatory)
Wood-burning stove HETAS As above Yes (mandatory)
Pellet boiler HETAS As above Yes (mandatory)
Flue Type Applications Key Spec
Existing brick chimney (relined) All fuel types Line with appropriate grade stainless; check chimney condition
Twin-wall insulated flue (external) Solid fuel, oil; some gas EN 1856-1 standard; clearance from combustibles
Single-skin stainless (internal) Gas only (low temp) Not for solid fuel; only where route is internal/warm
Balanced flue (concentric) Gas boilers and fires Room-sealed; no chimney; pass through wall
Air Vent Sizing (Open-Flued Appliances)
Appliance ≤5 kW: no vent required
5 kW–50 kW: 550 mm² × (rated kW – 5)
Example: 24 kW boiler in tight room: 550 × (24–5) = 10,450 mm² free area

Detailed Guidance

Combustion Air — The Key Principle

An open-flued appliance draws combustion air from the room it is in. As building envelopes become more airtight (cavity wall insulation, draught-proofing, sealed windows), the risk of insufficient combustion air increases. Insufficient air causes:

Permanent ventilation is mandatory for open-flued appliances in tight buildings. The vent opening must be permanent — it cannot have a closeable cover. The homeowner cannot block it up after installation.

Interconnected rooms: If the appliance is in a room that connects to an adjoining room with no door, the ventilation can be from the adjoining room — but the total free area must still be adequate for the combined space.

Room-sealed appliances: These draw combustion air from outside via the flue/air intake system. No combustion ventilation is required for the room. However, a room containing people still needs comfort ventilation (trickle vents or mechanical ventilation) if the room is very airtight.

Flue Systems

Sizing: Flue diameter must match the appliance's flue outlet size. Do not reduce flue diameter below the appliance connection. Do not increase to a large diameter — oversized flues draw too slowly, cause condensation, and tarry deposits (especially in wood-burning appliances).

Height above ridge:

Chimney condition check before lining:

  1. Sweep the chimney (mandatory before lining)
  2. Check for obstructions, pot condition, and brickwork condition
  3. Smoke test the chimney to check for gaps or holes in the masonry
  4. Check chimney is not shared with another appliance on a different floor (never connect two appliances to the same flue)
  5. Check adequate draw — a slow-drawing chimney indicates a structural problem or wrong height

Flexible liner installation:

  1. Lower liner from top of chimney (requires access to chimney pot and roof); attach to a nosed end weight to thread through
  2. Secure liner to appliance flue collar with an appropriate connector and clamp
  3. Fix top plate (register plate or adaptor) to seal the chimney top around the liner
  4. Install a suitable cowl (H-cowl or anti-downdraft) on the terminal
  5. Fill cavity between liner and brickwork with vermiculite or pumice insulating fill if needed (recommended for solid fuel to maintain draw; also reduces condensate penetration)

CO Alarms — Practical Requirements

From 1 October 2022 in England, Regulation 38A requires a CO alarm in any room containing a fixed combustion appliance (except gas cookers) for new builds and any replacement appliances.

Positioning:

Types:

Note: CO alarms do not replace the requirement for correctly installed and maintained flues. They are a final safety net only.

Spillage Testing

Open-flued appliances must be tested for combustion product spillage at commissioning. The test simulates worst-case negative pressure in the room:

  1. Close all external doors and windows in the occupied space
  2. Switch on all extract fans (kitchen extractor, bathroom fans, tumble dryer)
  3. Light appliance; allow to warm up (5–10 minutes)
  4. Hold smoke match or smoke puffer at the draught diverter or draught break
  5. Observe smoke: if smoke spills into the room (not drawn up the flue), the appliance fails spillage test
  6. If spillage is found: investigate cause (blocked flue, insufficient combustion air, wrong flue connection, interlock with extract fans); do not commission until resolved

Guidance: BS 5440-1 covers flue installation for gas appliances; it includes spillage test procedure. HETAS guidance applies to solid fuel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a CO alarm if I'm replacing an existing boiler?

In England (from October 2022), yes — a CO alarm is required when replacing a fixed combustion appliance. Gas Safe registered engineers installing a replacement boiler must ensure a CO alarm is in place. If one is not present, the engineer should install one or advise the customer in writing that one is required.

Can I install a log burner in a room with a suspended timber floor?

Yes, but the hearth requirements are strict. Approved Document J requires:

Can a wood-burning stove be installed in a listed building?

Yes, but Listed Building Consent is required for any works affecting a protected structure — this includes cutting through floors for hearths, installing a new flue, or modifying an existing chimney. The local authority conservation officer may have views on aesthetics (external twin-wall flues on a listed property may not be acceptable). HETAS registration does not override the LBC requirement.

Regulations & Standards