What Are the Requirements for Fire Evacuation Plans in UK Buildings?

Quick Answer: The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (Article 15) requires every responsible person for non-domestic premises to prepare a written emergency plan covering fire detection, evacuation procedures, and means of escape. The evacuation strategy — simultaneous, stay-put, or phased — must be determined by the fire risk assessment and appropriate to the building type and occupancy. Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans (PEEPs) must be prepared for all occupants who cannot evacuate independently.

Summary

An emergency plan for fire is not simply a floor plan with arrows pointing to the exit. It is a documented set of decisions and procedures that describe exactly what happens when a fire is detected — who does what, in what order, and how the building is safely evacuated. For complex buildings, it is a detailed operational document. For a small low-risk office, it can be concise, but it must still cover the key elements required by the RRO.

The choice of evacuation strategy is one of the most consequential decisions in the emergency plan. For commercial buildings, simultaneous evacuation (everyone leaves immediately on alarm) is typically the default. For purpose-built blocks of flats, stay-put has historically been standard. For large complex buildings — hospitals, shopping centres, high-rise offices — phased evacuation may be used. These strategies have profoundly different implications for alarm systems, exit capacity, staff training, and the building's fire strategy.

The post-Grenfell landscape has shifted thinking on stay-put strategies. NFCC guidance has become more cautious about stay-put in buildings with compromised compartmentation or combustible cladding, and the Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 have imposed new documentation and communication requirements on responsible persons in higher-risk residential buildings.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Building Type Typical Strategy Key Consideration
Small commercial office (single storey) Simultaneous All leave on alarm
Multi-storey commercial office Simultaneous or phased Phased reduces stair congestion in very tall buildings
Shopping centre / retail mall Simultaneous (with phasing for staff) Public may not follow instructions
Hospital Defend-in-place / progressive horizontal Patients cannot evacuate; fire contained, then moved if needed
School Simultaneous Assembly point at field; register checked
Care home Defend-in-place / progressive horizontal Residents moved to safer areas within building
Purpose-built block of flats (good compartmentation) Stay-put Residents stay unless own flat affected
Block with cladding/compartmentation issues Simultaneous (with waking watch or common alarm) NFCC simultaneous evacuation guidance applies
Hotel Simultaneous or phased Sleeping risk; early detection critical
Industrial / warehouse Simultaneous Large open spaces; rapid fire growth

Detailed Guidance

Article 15 Requirements

Article 15 of the RRO requires the responsible person to:

"Establish and, where necessary, give effect to appropriate procedures, including safety drills, to be followed in the event of serious and imminent danger to relevant persons."

In practice this means:

The emergency plan must address:

  1. The action to be taken by any person who discovers a fire
  2. How the fire alarm is raised and who calls the fire service
  3. The evacuation procedure and route for each part of the building
  4. Assembly points and how to account for all persons
  5. The role of fire wardens and their specific duties
  6. Arrangements for assisting people who may need help evacuating
  7. Any specific actions required for particular areas (e.g., shutting off gas, securing hazardous materials)
  8. How the building is confirmed to be clear

Simultaneous Evacuation

Simultaneous evacuation means that when the fire alarm activates, every person in the building leaves immediately by the nearest available escape route and assembles at the designated assembly point. This is the simplest strategy and is default for most commercial premises.

Key requirements for simultaneous evacuation:

Stay-Put Strategy

Stay-put (sometimes called "defend in place" in non-residential contexts) is the standard strategy for purpose-built blocks of flats with good fire compartmentation. The principle: each flat is a compartment that resists fire spread for at least 60 minutes. Residents are safer staying in their flats than evacuating through common areas that may be smoke-affected.

When stay-put is appropriate:

When stay-put must be reviewed or abandoned:

The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 require responsible persons for multi-occupied residential buildings to prominently display information to residents about the evacuation strategy for the building, including in each flat and in common areas.

Phased Evacuation

Phased evacuation is used in large, complex buildings where simultaneous evacuation of all occupants would be impractical or would cause dangerous stairwell overcrowding. It is typically used in high-rise offices, large hotels, and major shopping centres.

Typical phased evacuation sequence:

  1. Fire floor evacuates immediately on alarm
  2. Adjacent floors (one above and one below) evacuate at or shortly after the fire floor
  3. All other floors remain in place initially, on alert, ready to evacuate if instructed
  4. Remaining floors evacuate progressively if the fire is not contained

Phased evacuation requires:

Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans (PEEPs)

Any person who cannot self-evacuate unaided — due to a mobility impairment, sensory impairment, cognitive impairment, or temporary condition — must have a PEEP. The RRO does not use this exact term but Article 15's requirement for arrangements for people with mobility or sensory impairments creates the obligation.

A PEEP is an individualised plan that documents:

Refuges: Many buildings have designated refuge areas — fire-rated spaces adjacent to stairwells where people who cannot use the stairs can wait for assistance from the fire service. A refuge is not a place of safety; it is a place of temporary shelter with two-way communication to the fire control point. A PEEP must specify what the person should do in the refuge and how the fire service will be alerted to their location.

IEEPs (Individual Emergency Evacuation Plans): Where a person's needs have been identified but the assistance arrangements are not yet in place, an IEEP documents the interim position. The responsible person cannot simply defer PEEP preparation — they must implement appropriate arrangements as a matter of urgency.

Visitors with mobility impairments: The responsible person must have a procedure for identifying and assisting visiting members of the public who may need help evacuating. Visitor sign-in procedures, reception staff training, and designated assistance points all contribute to this.

Fire Wardens (Marshals)

Fire wardens (also called fire marshals) are nominated employees with specific duties in a fire emergency. The responsible person must appoint a sufficient number, taking into account the size and use of the premises and the nature of the fire risks.

Typical fire warden duties:

Fire wardens must receive training appropriate to their duties. Induction is not sufficient; training should include practical elements such as floor-clearing drills, use of evacuation equipment, communication with the fire service, and use of fire extinguishers (to the extent they are expected to use them).

Signage Requirements

BS 5499 and the Health and Safety (Safety Signs and Signals) Regulations 1996 require that escape routes and fire safety features are clearly signposted. Signage must:

For higher-risk residential buildings, the Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 require wayfinding signage (floor identification, direction to stairwells) to be posted in common areas to assist the fire service in the building.

Drills and Testing

Regular drills test whether the emergency plan works in practice and ensure that employees and occupants are familiar with the procedures. For most workplaces, at least one full evacuation drill per year is recommended. Higher-risk premises (hospitals, care homes, schools) should conduct more frequent drills.

A drill should be:

For residential buildings, drills are more difficult — residents cannot be required to participate. Responsible persons can and should communicate the evacuation strategy to residents in writing and provide information on what to do if the alarm sounds, but physical drills of the full residential evacuation are rarely carried out outside of trial exercises.

Documentation

The emergency plan should be a live document, updated whenever there is a change to the building, its use, or its occupancy. It should be:

For multi-occupied buildings, the responsible person for common areas should share the plan with all employers and residents' representatives, and coordinate emergency plans where different parts of the building have different occupants.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a small office with 5 staff need a written emergency plan?

Yes. The RRO's requirement for a written emergency plan (Article 15) applies regardless of premises size and is separate from the documented fire risk assessment requirement (which applies when there are 5 or more employees). Even for a two-person office, while the risk assessment may not need to be written, good practice dictates a written emergency plan that is shared with all staff. For larger premises, both are required.

How do we handle a stay-put strategy when residents keep evacuating on alarm?

False alarm fatigue is a significant problem in residential blocks where the alarm sounds frequently. Residents who have been evacuated multiple times by false alarms learn to ignore the alarm. Responsible persons must balance reducing false alarms (by improving detection technology and maintenance) with reinforcing that the strategy for their specific building may require evacuation. For buildings where the compartmentation has been assessed as adequate, the written information to residents should clearly explain that the strategy is stay-put except where their own flat is directly affected. Where the strategy has been changed to simultaneous evacuation, clear written instruction and potentially a waking watch or common alarm is needed.

Are PEEPs required for external visitors?

The responsibility extends to any person who might be present in the premises, including visitors. For most commercial buildings, a generic visitor evacuation procedure (reception staff assist, refuges identified, fire service informed) will be adequate. Where a known visitor with specific mobility or sensory needs is expected, a tailored PEEP for that visit should be prepared. The reception sign-in process should identify any assistance needs.

What is the difference between a fire action notice and an emergency plan?

A fire action notice is the brief notice posted by fire alarm call points and exits, giving immediate instructions (e.g., "On hearing the alarm, leave the building by the nearest exit. Do not use the lift. Go to the assembly point"). It is not the same as the full emergency plan, which is a detailed documented set of procedures. Both are required. The fire action notice gives immediate visual instruction; the emergency plan documents the full arrangements in a form that can be audited, updated, and used to train staff.

Regulations & Standards