Fire Door Regulations: FD30, FD60, Signage & Inspection Requirements

Quick Answer: FD30 fire doors provide 30 minutes fire resistance; FD60 provides 60 minutes. Fire doors are required in all new and converted dwellings where a floor is more than 4.5m above ground level (loft conversions), between integral garages and dwellings, and in HMOs and certain other residential buildings. Installation must be by a competent person and, in England, doors must be third-party certified (Certifire, BWF-Certimark, or similar) from January 2023 in new builds.

Summary

Fire doors save lives. The specific guidance on where they are needed, what specification they must meet, and how they must be installed has become significantly more detailed following the Grenfell Tower inquiry and subsequent changes to Building Regulations. The Building Safety Act 2022 introduced new accountabilities for higher-risk buildings, but the requirements affecting everyday domestic and commercial building work have also been tightened.

For most residential building work — loft conversions, garage conversions, HMO fitting out — fire doors are a regulatory requirement, not an option. Getting this wrong doesn't just affect building control sign-off; in the event of a fire, an incorrectly fitted or maintained fire door can fail, potentially with fatal consequences.

The critical points are: the door and frame must be a tested assembly (not a fire door leaf fitted in a standard lining); the intumescent seals and smoke seals must be intact and correctly specified; the hinges must be fire-rated; and the door must be correctly adjusted to close fully against the stop without being held open.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Location Fire Door Standard Notes
Loft conversion (house over 4.5m) FD30S Between habitable rooms and escape route
Integral garage to dwelling FD30S Wall and ceiling also to be 30-minute standard
Flat entrance doors (blocks) FD30S minimum FD60S in some higher-risk buildings
Staircase enclosure (new build) FD30S All doors off the escape stair
HMO — room doors FD30S All habitable room doors onto escape route
HMO — kitchen FD30S Kitchen is highest fire risk room
Commercial to domestic (above) FD60 Between commercial and residential floors
Smoke lobby FD30S × 2 Two doors with lobby between
Component Requirement Standard
Door leaf FD30 or FD60 certified BS 476 Pt 22 or BS EN 1634-1
Frame/lining Must match door test evidence Part of certified assembly
Hinges Min. 3 × CE marked, Grade 11+ BS EN 1935
Intumescent strip As specified in test certificate Usually 10 × 4mm or 15 × 4mm
Smoke seal Brush pile or blade type As specified
Door closer Grade 3+ self-closing BS EN 1154
Glazing (if used) Fire-resistant glass only BS 476 Pt 22 or BS EN 1364

Detailed Guidance

Where Fire Doors Are Required — Domestic

Building Regulations Approved Document B (Volume 1, Dwellings) sets out the specific requirements:

Loft conversions (creating a third storey): When a loft is converted to create a habitable storey at more than 4.5m above ground level, an automatic fire detection system (mains-wired Grade D1, LD2 as a minimum) AND fire doors are required to protect the escape route. Every door opening onto the staircase from a habitable room on the intermediate floors must be an FD30S door.

Integral garages: The wall and ceiling between an integral garage and the house must have 30 minutes' fire resistance. The door between the garage and the house must be an FD30S fire door. This applies to new builds and any conversion work connecting an existing garage to the living space.

Houses converted to flats: When a house is converted to self-contained flats, fire doors are required to each flat entrance (minimum FD30S) and at high-risk rooms (kitchens, if opening onto escape routes).

HMOs (Houses in Multiple Occupation): Full guidance from the local authority (housing department, not building control) applies. Typically FD30S to all habitable rooms opening onto the means of escape; FD30S to kitchen in all HMOs.

What Constitutes a Compliant Fire Door Assembly

A fire door is not just a door leaf — it is a system that must be installed exactly as tested. The test certificate for any certified fire door will specify:

You cannot:

You can (in most cases):

Gap Tolerances

The gap around the door leaf is critical. Too large a gap allows hot gases and flames to pass before the intumescent seal has expanded enough to close it.

Check gaps when the door is closed against the stop. A 3mm gap check card (often included in installation kits) makes this quick to verify.

Ironmongery Requirements

Every piece of ironmongery on a fire door must be compatible with the door certification:

Hinges: Minimum three CE-marked, Grade 11 hinges (ball-bearing for heavy fire doors). The Grade 11 classification covers fire performance under BS EN 1935. Steel butt hinges with steel ball bearings are standard; avoid iron or non-ferrous hinges.

Door closers: Grades 1–7 under BS EN 1154 govern closing force. Grade 3 is typical for domestic fire doors; Grade 4 for larger, heavier commercial doors. The closer must ensure the door closes fully from any open position (including against the draught created by opening a window in the room). Concealed overhead closers are acceptable; floor springs are acceptable for heavy doors.

Locks and latches: All locks and latches must be fire-rated (BS EN 12209 fire test). Standard tubular latches are generally not fire-rated — replace with a rated mortice latch or confirm with the test certificate.

Panic hardware: If fitted, must meet BS EN 1125 (for key-free exit) or BS EN 179 (for key-operated devices).

Inspection and Maintenance (Regulation 10)

For higher-risk residential buildings (over 11m in height), the Building Safety Act 2022 and associated Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 require:

For domestic dwellings not in higher-risk buildings, regular inspection is best practice but not legally mandated. Checks should include:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I fit a cat flap in a fire door?

No. Any penetration of the fire door leaf that is not covered by the test certificate invalidates the fire rating. A cat flap creates an unprotected aperture. If a cat flap is required, a non-fire-rated door must be used, and alternative means of compartmentalisation must be considered. This is a common enquiry, and the answer is always no.

Does a fire door need to be a specific colour?

No. Fire doors come in a wide range of finishes, veneer faces, and paint finishes. The colour does not affect the fire performance. However, the door must be identifiable as a fire door — typically by its Certifire label (inside the top edge or top corner) and by the "Fire Door Keep Shut" sign in non-domestic situations.

Can I use a magnetic hold-open device on a fire door?

Yes, in domestic settings (Houses) — a hold-open device with automatic release via the fire alarm is acceptable under Part B. In flats and commercial settings, hold-open devices are only permitted if the device releases and the door self-closes automatically upon activation of the fire alarm. Wedges, props, or furniture holding fire doors open are never acceptable.

Do all fire doors need a self-closer?

In domestic dwellings (single family homes), self-closing devices are required on fire doors in certain configurations (notably loft conversions and garage doors). In flats, HMOs, and commercial buildings, all fire doors must have self-closers. Where a closer would cause problems (e.g., for disabled access), a hold-open device with automatic release via the fire alarm is the accepted alternative.

How do I check if an existing door is a fire door?

Look for: a certification label on the top edge or in the rebate (Certifire, BWF-Certimark, or similar); a solid, heavy feel (FD30 cores are denser than hollow-core doors); intumescent strips visible in the door edge or frame rebate; at least three hinges. If none of these are present, assume it is not a fire door and cannot be relied upon as such.

Regulations & Standards