Interconnected Smoke Alarm Wiring: Mains, Battery & RF Linked Systems

Quick Answer: Building Regulations require at minimum a Grade D, Category LD2 alarm system in new and significantly refurbished dwellings (BS 5839-6:2019). This means mains-powered smoke alarms with a backup battery on each floor, and a heat detector in the kitchen — all interconnected so that activation of one triggers all. Interconnection can be hardwired (3-core cable between alarms) or RF (radio frequency wireless), both of which comply with BS 5839-6. Stand-alone battery alarms do not comply with new regulations for notifiable work.

Summary

Domestic smoke alarm requirements have evolved significantly from the early days of single battery-operated detectors. Modern Building Regulations (Approved Document B for new builds and Approved Document J for solid fuel, with broader application via BS 5839-6:2019) establish a graded system of protection based on building type and level of risk. Getting this right is relevant to all tradespeople — not just electricians — because any notifiable building work (extensions, loft conversions, significant alterations) triggers a requirement to assess and potentially upgrade the smoke alarm provision.

The most important concept is interlinked detection: when one alarm detects smoke, all alarms in the property sound simultaneously. This is what Grades A–D and Category LD1–LD3 describe — the power source, the interconnection method, and the extent of coverage. Most domestic dwellings require Grade D (mains-powered with battery backup) but Grade C (panel-based system) may be specified in larger or higher-risk properties.

A separate but equally important area is CO (carbon monoxide) alarm requirements, which overlap with smoke alarms in regulations but serve a different detection purpose. CO alarm requirements have been strengthened in England — all properties with solid fuel appliances must have a CO alarm, and landlord requirements now extend further.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Grade Power Source Battery Backup Interconnection Typical Use
Grade A Panel system (addressable) Yes Hardwired Large houses, commercial
Grade B Panel system (non-addressable) Yes Hardwired Larger HMOs
Grade C Mains-powered, central control Battery Hardwired Higher-risk dwellings
Grade D Mains-powered, no central panel Battery backup Hardwired or RF Standard new build/refurb
Grade E Mains-powered, no backup No Hardwired or RF Legacy installs only
Grade F Battery only (sealed long-life) N/A — is battery None required (single room) Minor works, rented properties
Category Coverage Where Detectors Installed
LD1 Highest — all spaces All habitable rooms + circulation + kitchen
LD2 Standard — risk-based All circulation spaces + kitchen + high-risk rooms
LD3 Minimum Circulation spaces only (hall, landing, etc.)

Detailed Guidance

Positioning Smoke and Heat Alarms

Correct positioning is critical for reliable detection without nuisance alarms:

Smoke alarms (optical/ionisation/multi-sensor):

Heat detectors (kitchen):

On ceiling pitch: In rooms with a sloped ceiling, mount within 600mm of the highest point of the ceiling (for smoke, which rises to the apex).

Near doors: Detectors should not be mounted directly over a door (draughts can delay smoke reaching the sensor). Position 300–500mm from the door frame.

Hardwired Interconnection: 3-Wire System

Standard mains smoke alarms (Grade D) use a 3-wire interconnection:

The interconnect wire is typically run as a separate core in the cable or as a dedicated 1.0mm² cable (use 1.5mm² where easier). The interconnect is not polarity-sensitive in most systems. Connect all alarms' interconnect terminals together in one continuous loop (not a star arrangement in most cases — check manufacturer guidance).

Radial or ring: Most manufacturers specify a radial (daisy-chain) connection, not a ring. The first alarm's interconnect connects to the second, second to third, and so on — ending at the last alarm with the terminal unterminated (or with a termination resistor if specified).

Maximum alarms on interconnect circuit: Most manufacturers specify 12–20 alarms maximum. Exceeding this can prevent reliable triggering of all alarms simultaneously. Check the specific product data sheet.

Mains circuit: The mains supply (L and N) can be taken from a permanently live circuit (lighting circuit or dedicated circuit). Smoke alarms must not be on a switched circuit. Do not share the mains supply with the interconnect — they operate independently.

RF (Radio Frequency) Wireless Interconnection

RF-linked smoke alarms are increasingly popular in retrofits and conversions where running 3-core cable between floors is impractical. The alarms communicate by radio on a private frequency — when one alarm triggers, it transmits a signal causing all others to sound simultaneously.

Key points:

CO Alarm Requirements

Carbon monoxide is a by-product of incomplete combustion — relevant to all fuel-burning appliances (gas, oil, LPG, solid fuel, biomass). UK requirements have strengthened:

Solid fuel (all England, Scotland, Wales): CO alarm mandatory in every room with a solid fuel appliance; required at installation or during any notifiable work.

Gas appliances (England — since October 2022 for landlords): Landlords in England must ensure CO alarms are fitted in rooms with gas appliances. For owner-occupiers, it is strongly recommended but not yet mandatory for gas appliances (check current guidance).

CO alarm placement:

CO alarms should not be interconnected with smoke alarms unless specifically designed as combined units (dual-sensor alarms). CO and smoke are different hazards — triggering all smoke alarms when CO is detected is confusing and potentially dangerous (evacuating a CO incident is correct; but smoke alarm activation implies fire).

Testing and Maintenance

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to upgrade smoke alarms when fitting a new kitchen?

If the kitchen installation constitutes notifiable building work under Part P (new circuits, significant electrical alterations), the Building Control officer may require upgrading the smoke/heat alarm provision to current standards (Grade D, LD2 minimum). In practice, this typically means fitting a mains-powered heat detector in the kitchen, connected to the existing smoke alarm network. Check with your Building Control body.

Can I use battery alarms in a loft conversion?

For a loft conversion that is notifiable under Building Regulations (which most loft conversions are), the entire dwelling's smoke alarm provision must be assessed. Battery-only alarms (Grade F) are insufficient for the areas added by the conversion. The loft conversion requires mains-powered, interconnected alarms (Grade D, LD2 minimum), and existing battery alarms elsewhere in the property may need upgrading. Budget for this in your quote.

How do I know if RF alarms are linked correctly?

After programming all alarms into the same RF network, test by activating one alarm (hold the test button until it sounds) and immediately confirming that all other alarms in the property also sound. If any do not, they have not received the RF signal — check range, re-pair the specific alarm. Some systems have a "link" indicator light that shows if the alarm is within range of the network.

Is one smoke alarm per floor enough?

For a standard 3-bedroom house, the minimum LD3 requirement (circulation spaces only) requires: one in the hall (ground floor), one on the first floor landing. However, LD2 (the recommended standard for new/refurbished dwellings) also requires a heat detector in the kitchen. Many designers and insurers recommend LD2 as standard — add alarms in any room that opens directly onto a circulation route, and in principal rooms on upper floors where occupants sleep.

Regulations & Standards