Summary

Smoke and heat alarm requirements changed significantly in 2022 in Scotland, and the rest of the UK has seen progressive updates through Building Regulations revisions. For any builder or electrician fitting alarms, the key distinction is between Grade (the type of alarm system) and Category (where alarms are placed). Getting these mixed up is common — specifying the right Grade but wrong Category (or vice versa) can result in a non-compliant installation.

The change that catches most tradespeople out is the rule for three-storey dwellings and loft conversions. A two-storey house needs Grade D, Category LD2 as a minimum. Extend it to three storeys (e.g., a loft conversion) and the Building Regs require a protected stair with fire doors, plus an alarm system to LD2 throughout all three floors. The interlinked requirement means that when one alarm activates, all alarms sound — this is now mandatory for new build and most notifiable alterations.

Landlord obligations are a growing area. The Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022 (England) require landlords to have at least one smoke alarm on each storey and a CO alarm in any room with a fixed combustion appliance. Failure to comply can result in remediation notices and civil penalties. CO alarms are covered separately in carbon monoxide.

Key Facts

  • BS 5839-6:2019 — the applicable standard; replaced 2004 edition; defines Grade A–F and Category LD1–LD3
  • Grade D — mains-powered alarms with integral battery backup; the minimum for new dwellings
  • Grade D1 — mains-powered with tamper-proof long-life (10-year) non-replaceable battery backup
  • Grade D2 — mains-powered with replaceable battery backup
  • Grade F — battery-only alarms; only acceptable for existing dwellings and minor works where mains wiring is impractical
  • Category LD1 — alarms in all areas including inside rooms; maximum coverage, for highest risk properties
  • Category LD2 — alarms in escape routes (hallways and landings) PLUS rooms with high fire risk (kitchen, living room); standard for most new dwellings
  • Category LD3 — alarms in escape routes only; minimum acceptable for existing dwellings, not for new build
  • Interlinked — when one alarm activates, all alarms sound; mandatory for new dwellings; wireless interlink (RF) is acceptable as an alternative to hardwired interlink
  • Smoke alarm type — optical (photoelectric) for living rooms and bedrooms (more sensitive to slow smouldering fires); ionisation for escape routes; combination optical/ionisation detectors now standard for most domestic use
  • Heat alarm — for kitchens where cooking aerosols would cause false alarms from smoke alarms; standard is a rate-of-rise heat alarm or fixed temperature 58°C alarm
  • Positioning: ceiling mount — install within 300mm of the apex of a pitched ceiling; at least 300mm from any wall or light fitting
  • Hallway/landing spacing — maximum 7.5m from any door to a room to nearest detector
  • Bedroom doors — closed bedroom doors give approximately 3 minutes of extra escape time in a fire; inform clients
  • Scotland — Tolerable Standard (Scotland) Regulations 2022 require interlinked smoke alarms in living rooms, hallways, and landings; heat alarm in kitchen; CO alarm where there's a fuel-burning appliance
  • Building Regs Part B — Approved Document B references BS 5839-6 for fire detection requirements in dwellings

Quick Reference Table

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Situation Minimum Grade Minimum Category Interlinked?
New dwelling (England & Wales) D1 LD2 Yes
Loft conversion (3-storey) D1 LD2 (all floors) Yes
Existing dwelling (landlord obligation) D LD3 min (1 per storey) Recommended
HMO (Houses in Multiple Occupation) D LD2 Yes
Scotland — all existing dwellings (2022+) D LD2 (inc. living room) Yes
Extension with new rooms D1 Extend existing system Yes
Basement conversion D1 LD2 Yes

Detailed Guidance

Understanding Grades

The Grade determines the power source and backup:

  • Grade A: Commercial-style panel system; not used in domestic dwellings
  • Grade C: Mains-powered with central control equipment; used in larger residential
  • Grade D: Mains-powered with integral battery; the domestic standard. D1 has long-life sealed battery (10 years), D2 has replaceable battery. D1 is preferred because it cannot be removed by occupants who find beeping annoying.
  • Grade E: Mains-powered, no battery backup; not recommended — power cut = no alarm
  • Grade F: Battery only. F1 = long-life sealed; F2 = replaceable. Permitted for existing dwellings as a pragmatic concession.

For new build and material changes (extensions, loft conversions, garage conversions), Grade D1 is the required minimum under Building Regs. Wireless interlinked Grade D1 systems (e.g., Aico Ei Series, FireAngel Pro Series) are widely used and fully compliant with BS 5839-6.

Understanding Categories

The Category determines where alarms go:

  • LD1: Highest coverage — detectors in all areas including bedrooms and living spaces. Used in high-risk properties or where the occupant's escape capability is limited.
  • LD2: Standard new build coverage — all escape routes (every landing, hallway) PLUS all rooms with high fire risk. "High fire risk" means kitchens (heat alarm, not smoke), living rooms, and any room where a combustion appliance or significant fuel load is present.
  • LD3: Escape routes only — every hallway and landing. This is the minimum for existing dwellings (e.g., landlord compliance), but provides no advance warning from a fire starting in a bedroom or living room.

For the average 3-bed semi, LD2 requires: smoke alarm in hallway (ground floor), smoke alarm on landing (first floor), heat alarm in kitchen, smoke alarm in living room. Minimum four alarms.

Wiring and Interlink

Hardwired interlink: all alarms share a common wire (typically 1.5mm two-core and earth with an additional 1.5mm core for the interconnect signal). All alarms on the same circuit. When one activates, the interconnect wire carries a signal to all others. This is the neatest solution in new build or when ceiling voids are accessible.

Wireless interlink: each alarm communicates via RF (radio frequency) to the others. No interconnect wire needed. Requires matching manufacturer (Aico, FireAngel, FireAngel Pro) — you cannot mix brands. Reliable and increasingly common in retrofit. BS 5839-6 accepts RF interconnection.

Spur from lighting circuit: alarms are typically spurred from the nearest lighting circuit at ceiling level. This means they share the lighting circuit supply but are not switched — they must not lose power when the light switch is turned off. Connect after the switch feed at the lighting rose, not at the switch.

Part P notification: electrical work for alarms in existing dwellings may be notifiable under Part P depending on the location. Consult part p notifications.

Positioning Rules (BS 5839-6:2019)

Ceiling-mounted position:

  • Centre of ceiling is ideal
  • At least 300mm from any wall
  • At least 300mm from any light fitting (heat from bulbs can interfere)
  • Not within 300mm of a ceiling apex (trapped warm air at apex can delay detection)

Hallways and corridors:

  • One alarm per 7.5m run; for longer corridors, space evenly not exceeding 7.5m between alarms and walls/doors

Sloped ceilings:

  • Mount within 300mm of the apex (smoke rises to highest point)

Kitchens:

  • Always a heat alarm, not a smoke alarm — cooking aerosols cause constant false alarms with smoke detectors
  • Mount at the ceiling, not above the hob
  • Standard: fixed temperature 58°C or rate-of-rise heat alarm

Garages:

  • Not required by BS 5839-6 but recommended; heat alarm (fumes from vehicles would false-trigger smoke alarms)

Loft spaces:

  • If habitable, treat as any other room

Scotland — Tolerable Standard 2022

Since 1 February 2022, all homes in Scotland (rented and owner-occupied) must have:

  • At least one smoke alarm in the room used most for general daytime living (typically the living room)
  • At least one smoke alarm in every circulation area on each storey (hallways and landings)
  • One heat alarm in the kitchen
  • All smoke and heat alarms interlinked
  • Carbon monoxide detector in any room with a fuel-burning appliance

This is significantly more extensive than the England and Wales requirements for existing homes. Alarms must be ceiling-mounted (wall-mount is not acceptable in Scotland for this regulation).

Maintenance and Testing

  • Test all alarms monthly using the test button
  • Replace battery on Grade F2 alarms at least annually
  • Replace entire Grade D1/F1 alarm at end of manufacturer's rated life (typically 10 years)
  • Vacuum dust from detector chambers annually
  • Document testing for rental properties — landlords should keep records

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use battery-only alarms in a new extension?

No. For new dwellings and material changes (extensions, conversions), Building Regs require mains-powered Grade D alarms. Battery-only (Grade F) is only acceptable in existing dwellings where running mains cable is genuinely impractical.

Do all alarms have to be the same brand?

For wireless interlinked systems, yes — you must use alarms from the same manufacturer on the same wireless protocol. You cannot mix Aico and FireAngel in the same interlinked network. For hardwired interlinked systems, different brands can theoretically share an interconnect wire but this is not recommended due to compatibility issues with the interconnect signal voltage.

What's the difference between a smoke alarm and a smoke detector?

Technically, a smoke alarm is a self-contained unit with its own sounder; a smoke detector is part of a larger system with a separate control panel and sounder. In domestic use, the terms are used interchangeably. BS 5839-6 applies to domestic alarms (self-contained units), while BS 5839-1 covers commercial detection and alarm systems with panels.

My client says the alarms keep going off when cooking — what should I change?

Replace the kitchen smoke alarm with a heat alarm. If the false alarms are from a nearby kitchen alarm affecting connected rooms, consider an optical (rather than ionisation) smoke alarm in hallways adjacent to the kitchen — optical detectors are less sensitive to cooking aerosols.

Regulations & Standards