Kitchen Extraction Ducting: 150mm vs 125mm Rigid vs Flexible, Run Length Limits, Approved Document F 30 l/s Requirement

Quick Answer: Approved Document F (2021) requires a kitchen extract rate of 30 l/s (108 m³/h) for cooker hoods and 13 l/s for recirculation. Rigid circular ducting (150mm preferred, 125mm minimum) must be used for runs over 1.5m; flexible aluminium foil duct can only be used for short final connections of up to 1.5m. Maximum equivalent duct length for a domestic cooker hood is typically 3–4m for 150mm rigid duct; each 90° bend reduces effective length by approximately 1m. The duct must terminate in a purpose-made wall or roof vent with backdraft shutter.

Summary

Kitchen extraction ducting is one of the most commonly incorrectly installed elements in UK kitchens. The failures fall into predictable patterns: flexible duct run the full length from hood to external wall, creating excessive resistance; 100mm duct used where 125mm or 150mm is required; duct run through a void that cannot be cleaned or inspected; and termination vents too close to adjacent openings, recirculating cooking smells back into the building.

Approved Document F (2021 edition) strengthened the ventilation requirements for kitchens, setting a mandatory 30 l/s (litres per second) extract rate for ducted cooker hoods. This rate assumes a properly sized and routed duct. If the duct has too many bends or the wrong diameter, the hood motor cannot achieve 30 l/s even on maximum setting — which means the installation does not comply regardless of the hood's rated capacity.

Getting extraction right matters for the occupant's health (cooking fumes are a significant indoor air pollutant), for the building fabric (condensation and grease buildup in poorly ventilated kitchens causes mould), and for contractor liability. A Building Regulations-compliant extraction system that is properly commissioned is increasingly expected by building control officers, especially in new build and larger refurbishments.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Duct Diameter Max Airflow (typical) Equivalent Resistance of 90° Bend Typical Max Effective Run
100mm circular 30–40 l/s 0.8–1.0m Not recommended for ducted hood
125mm circular 50–70 l/s 1.0m 3m run, 1–2 bends
150mm circular rigid 80–120 l/s 1.0–1.2m 4m run, 2–3 bends
150mm flexible foil 60–80 l/s 1.5m 1.5m maximum total
200mm circular 150–200 l/s 1.2–1.5m Commercial ranges

Detailed Guidance

Duct Sizing and Resistance Calculation

The resistance of the duct system determines whether the hood fan can deliver the required extract rate. Fan manufacturers publish fan curves — the relationship between airflow (l/s or m³/h) and system resistance (Pa). The designer must ensure the system resistance at the required airflow (30 l/s) is less than the fan's available pressure at that flow rate.

Equivalent duct length method (simplified for domestic installations):

Assign equivalent lengths:

Example calculation:

For a 150mm duct system, a total equivalent length of 6m is at the limit of what most standard cooker hood fans can overcome to achieve 30 l/s. Where runs are longer or more convoluted, specify a higher-performance fan or increase duct to 200mm.

Rigid vs Flexible Ducting

Rigid circular duct (galvanised steel or aluminium):

Flexible aluminium foil duct:

Rectangular flat duct:

External Termination

The duct must terminate externally with a purpose-made terminal fitting. Key requirements:

Wall terminal:

Flat roof/soffit termination:

Distance from gas boiler flue:

Passing Through Fire Compartment Walls or Floors

Where the kitchen extraction duct passes through a fire compartment wall (e.g., into a garage, or through a separating floor between flats), a fire damper or intumescent sleeve is required per Approved Document B (Fire Safety):

Omitting fire protection in through-floor or through-wall duct installations is a Building Regulations compliance failure. Building control will check this on inspections for new build and renovation projects.

Frequently Asked Questions

My cooker hood is noisy even on low speed — is the duct wrong?

Noise in cooker hoods is typically caused by: (1) too small a duct creating turbulence — 100mm duct on a high-capacity hood is almost always the cause; (2) flexible duct that is kinked or too long — increases turbulence; (3) a blocked grease filter — restricted airflow causes the motor to work harder and noisier; (4) a backdraft damper flap that is stiff or partially open — rattles in the airflow. Check duct diameter first, then the grease filter (clean or replace), then the damper flap.

Can I duct through an internal wall into a chimney flue?

No. You must never use an existing chimney as a kitchen extraction route unless:

In most cases, ducting to the outside wall directly is simpler, shorter, and compliant. Using a flue serving or that previously served a gas boiler is prohibited under Gas Safety Regulations.

Does a recirculating hood comply with Approved Document F?

Not for new dwellings. ADH Part F (2021) requires 30 l/s ducted extraction for new kitchens. A recirculating (carbon filter) hood that does not duct to outside does not comply for new build. In existing dwellings where ducting to outside is genuinely impractical, a recirculating hood at 13 l/s minimum plus adequate background ventilation (trickle vents in windows) may be accepted by building control — discuss with your local authority BCO.

Regulations & Standards