Fire Alarm Categories L1–L5 and M: What Each Category Means, Risk Assessment Basis and Specifying the Right System

Quick Answer: BS 5839-1 defines seven system categories: M (manual call points only), L1–L5 (life protection — progressively less coverage), and P1–P2 (property protection). Category selection must be based on a fire risk assessment. L1 covers the whole building automatically; L5 covers only specific hazard areas. Most commercial premises are L2 (escape routes plus high-risk areas) or L3 (escape routes plus adjoining rooms). Sleeping risk buildings (hotels, care homes) must be L1 minimum.

Summary

The BS 5839-1 category system is the framework that defines how much automatic fire detection a building gets and why. Category selection is one of the first and most important design decisions — it affects the number of detectors, the cost of the installation, the time to detect a fire, and the occupants' chance of safe evacuation.

Categories are not a menu from which the customer picks the cheapest option. They must be selected on the basis of a fire risk assessment (FRA). The fire alarm designer must understand the building's occupancy type, the sleeping risk (if any), the fire load, the escape route complexity, and the insurer's requirements. The result must be documented.

A common source of conflict is the gap between what a customer wants to spend and what the FRA says is needed. The designer's obligation is to specify the correct category and document the reasons. If the customer insists on a lower category than the FRA requires, this must be recorded in writing, and the designer should carefully consider whether they can issue a Certificate of Conformity for a system that does not meet the assessed need.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Category Automatic Detection Coverage Typical Use
M None Call points and sounders only Very low risk, single occupancy
L5 Yes (limited) Specified areas only Hazard-specific protection; heritage retrofits
L4 Yes Escape routes only Low risk premises; short escape routes
L3 Yes Escape routes + rooms onto escape routes Standard commercial; medium risk
L2 Yes Escape routes + high-risk areas Most commercial offices; warehouses
L1 Yes Entire building Sleeping risk; high-rise; heritage high risk
P2 Yes (limited) Specified areas Insurance requirement for high-value areas
P1 Yes Entire building Insurance property protection; early FRS

Detailed Guidance

Category M: Manual Only

A Category M system consists of manual call points (MCPs) distributed throughout the building so that no person has to travel more than 45 m to reach one (30 m in high-risk areas), connected to an alarm signal system (sounders).

There is no automatic detection. The system relies entirely on a person discovering the fire and operating a call point.

Appropriate for:

Not appropriate for:

Many old commercial buildings have M-category systems that have not been upgraded. The responsible person's FRA should identify whether this is still appropriate given current occupancy and use.

Category L5: Specified Area Protection

L5 provides automatic detection only in defined specific areas. The rationale is that fire in these areas represents the highest risk to life, and detection there provides meaningful warning time.

Appropriate for:

L5 is often used as an interim measure when upgrading from M to L2/L3 — the highest-risk areas get detection first.

Category L4: Escape Route Detection

L4 provides automatic detection in all escape routes — corridors, stairwells, lobbies, and the area immediately outside exit doors. Detection in occupied rooms is not included.

Purpose: Provide early warning if fire breaks out in or reaches the escape route before occupants have left. Escape routes are typically low-fire-load areas (no ignition sources), so fire in a corridor usually means smoke has migrated from an occupied room — L4 gives warning when this has progressed far enough to affect the escape route.

Appropriate for:

Not appropriate for:

Category L3: Escape Routes Plus Adjacent Rooms

L3 adds detection in all rooms that open directly onto an escape route. If a fire starts in an office that opens onto a corridor, L3 detects it before smoke penetrates the corridor and compromises the escape route.

Purpose: Extend warning to rooms adjacent to escape routes, providing earlier detection of fire that has not yet reached the escape route.

Coverage: Every room whose door opens directly into a protected escape route gets a detector. Rooms that open into other rooms (not directly into corridors) are not covered. Inner rooms (rooms accessible only through other rooms) are not covered unless those through-rooms are adjacent to escape routes.

Appropriate for:

Not appropriate for:

Category L2: Escape Routes Plus High-Risk Areas

L2 is the most frequently specified category for UK commercial premises. It adds detection in all "high-risk" areas to the L3 coverage.

High-risk areas under BS 5839-1 include:

Purpose: The combination of escape route protection (L3) plus high-risk area detection (L2) provides comprehensive life protection — fires are most likely to start in high-risk areas, and escape routes are protected for evacuation.

Note: The high-risk area list is determined by the FRA, not by a fixed definition. The designer must assess what is high-risk for this specific building and occupancy.

Category L1: Full Building Coverage

L1 provides automatic detection throughout every part of the building. This is the maximum life-protection category.

Required for:

In sleeping risk buildings, detection must be in:

P Categories: Property Protection

P1 and P2 categories are about protecting property, not life — the fire brigade is summoned quickly to minimise damage.

P1 — detection throughout the building. This allows fire to be detected at the earliest stage (incipient smouldering) before it develops into a full-room fire, giving fire crews maximum time to suppress before major property loss.

P2 — detection only in specified high-value or high-risk areas. Common examples: wine cellars in a restaurant, archives in a solicitors' office, server rooms in a data centre.

P categories are typically added to an L-category system as a combined system (e.g., L3P2 — life protection in escape routes and adjacent rooms, plus property protection in the data room and archives).

Risk Assessment-Led Category Selection

The FRA methodology for category selection considers:

Factor Category Push
Sleeping risk L1 minimum
Multi-storey L3 minimum
Complex escape routes L2 or L1
High fire-load areas L2 (to include those areas)
Slow evacuation (disabilities, age) L2 or L1
High occupant density L2
Insurance P1 requirement Add P1 layer
Heritage/restricted installation L5 starting point
Short escape routes, low occupancy L4 acceptable

Always document the FRA inputs and the category selection rationale in the system design file. This documentation protects the designer if the category is later questioned.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who should carry out the fire risk assessment?

The fire risk assessment should be carried out by a "competent person" under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. For most commercial buildings, this means an accredited fire risk assessor (registered with FRACS, IFPO, or equivalent). The fire alarm designer can carry out the FRA if they are suitably qualified, but for significant premises this should be done by a dedicated fire risk assessor, with the alarm designer using the FRA as a design input.

Can a building have mixed categories in different zones?

Yes. BS 5839-1 permits mixed-category systems where different parts of a building are given different levels of protection. For example, the public areas of a hotel might be L1 while ancillary storage areas are L2. However, the overall system must be designed coherently and the cause-and-effect schedule must reflect the different coverage in each zone. Document the rationale for each area's category.

Is Category L2 always sufficient for offices?

Not necessarily. If the office has sleeping risk (late-night cleaners with sleeping arrangements, or overnight security staff who sleep on site), L1 is required for those areas. If the office has unusual fire loads (chemical storage, a manufacturing process), higher-category or supplementary detection may be needed. The FRA makes the determination — there is no single answer that applies to all offices.

What category do most Building Regulations-compliant new commercial buildings require?

Approved Document B (2019, England) references BS 5839-1 and requires a minimum of L3 for most non-domestic buildings. L2 is required where high-risk areas are present. L1 is required for residential care homes, hospitals, and buildings with sleeping risk. The local building control officer or fire safety officer may require a higher category if the FRA indicates it.

Can Category M be acceptable for a small office?

Yes, for a genuinely low-risk single-occupancy small office where:

However, the risk threshold for M-only is quite narrow. If the office has a kitchenette, electrical plant, or more than a handful of occupants, L3 or L4 is more appropriate. Get the FRA right before specifying M-only.

Regulations & Standards