Gas Fire Installation: Balanced Flue, Flueless & Open Fronted Requirements

Quick Answer: All gas fire installations require Gas Safe registration for the installer. The three types are: open-flued (uses room air for combustion, needs a chimney or flue), balanced flue (sealed unit drawing air and expelling products through a co-axial flue in the external wall), and flueless (catalytic combustion, no flue needed — but strict room size and ventilation requirements apply). Flueless gas fires are prohibited in bedrooms and bathrooms.

Summary

Gas fires and fireplaces are a significant part of the domestic gas installation market — not just as primary heat sources, but increasingly as aesthetic features. Fireplace specialists, heating engineers, and general builders all encounter gas fire installations, and understanding the distinct requirements for each type prevents dangerous installation errors.

The primary hazard with gas appliances is incomplete combustion producing carbon monoxide. The rules around ventilation, flue clearances, and room volume requirements for each fire type are specifically designed to prevent CO accumulation. Getting these wrong is not a minor compliance issue — it can be fatal.

Gas Safe registration is mandatory for any gas fire installation, regardless of whether the customer thinks it's a "simple job." There are no exemptions for gas appliance work.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

Need to quote gas work? squote generates accurate, professional quotes fast.

Try squote free →
Fire Type Flue Required? Room Ventilation Where Permitted CO Risk Level
Open-flued Yes (chimney or flue) Permanent vent often required Most rooms except bathrooms Higher
Balanced flue External wall penetration None required (sealed system) Most rooms; external wall needed Lower
Flueless No Strict room size/ACH requirements Living rooms only; NOT bedrooms/bathrooms Medium
Inset live fuel effect Yes As open-flued As open-flued Higher
Appliance Type Minimum Room Volume (Flueless)
DFE (Decorative fuel effect) 30m³ minimum
Radiant fire 20m³ minimum
Combined radiant/convector 20m³ minimum
Open-fronted convector Not flueless — must have flue

Detailed Guidance

Open-Flued Fires — Installation Requirements

Open-flued fires take combustion air from the room and discharge via an existing chimney or flue. Requirements:

Chimney/flue condition:

Register plate:

Ventilation:

Spillage test: After installation, carry out a full spillage test:

  1. Close all windows and doors
  2. Switch on all appliances that might depressurize the room (extractor fans, tumble dryers)
  3. Light the fire and allow it to reach operating temperature (at least 5 minutes)
  4. Hold a smoke match or draught indicator at the front of the fire's draught diverter/flue hood
  5. Smoke should be drawn into the flue, not spill into the room
  6. If spillage occurs, the installation must not proceed to completion — identify and resolve the cause

Balanced Flue Fires — Installation Requirements

Balanced flue fires have a sealed combustion chamber and do not require a chimney or room ventilation. The flue system is typically a co-axial pipe (pipe within a pipe) that penetrates the external wall:

Wall penetration:

No chimney required: Balanced flue fires cannot be installed in a chimney — the chimney is sealed off. If the customer has an existing chimney, it must be capped or sealed. A balanced flue fire is suitable for a room with no chimney where a conventional open-flued installation would require major works.

Flueless Gas Fires — Installation Requirements

Flueless fires use catalytic converters to oxidise CO to CO2 before it enters the room. No flue or chimney is needed, but the room must have sufficient natural ventilation to dilute CO2 and water vapour produced.

Prohibited locations:

Room size requirements:

CO alarm requirement: Strongly recommended with any flueless gas fire. The CO2 levels produced by a flueless fire make ambient air quality a concern — CO alarms provide early warning.

Gas Fire Notifiable Work

Under Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998, all gas fire installation work requires:

The installer must complete a handover checklist and leave the operating instructions with the customer. A completed gas safety record is best practice (and mandatory in some landlord scenarios).

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I install a gas fire in a conservatory?

A balanced flue fire can be installed in a conservatory with an external wall penetration. Open-flued fires and flueless fires are generally not suitable for conservatories due to the typically poor draught characteristics and single-glazed heat loss. Consult BS 5871 and Approved Document J; the conservatory's ventilation and thermal characteristics determine suitability.

Does a gas fire need a Building Regulations application?

Installing a new gas fire in an existing opening, or replacing a like-for-like gas fire, typically does not require a full Building Regulations application — it falls under competent person self-certification via the Gas Safe scheme. However, if a new flue liner is installed in a chimney as part of the installation, this is controlled work under Part J and the installer must notify. If a new gas supply is installed to reach the fire, this involves Part P notification.

What's the difference between a gas fire and a gas stove/log burner style heater?

Gas stoves are designed to look like wood-burning stoves but burn gas. They are typically open-flued appliances requiring a chimney and flue. They follow the same regulations as gas fires and equally require Gas Safe installation. Some gas stoves can be installed as balanced flue appliances — check the manufacturer's specifications.

Regulations & Standards