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11 March 2024 7 min readUpdated 19 May 2026

Fire Doors in HMOs: Landlord Responsibilities

Fire Door RangeFire Door Range team·7 min read
Fire Doors in HMOs: Landlord Responsibilities

Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) present a heightened fire risk due to the number of separate households sharing common areas, kitchens, and escape routes. The combination of multiple cooking facilities, diverse occupant behaviours, and often older building stock makes fire compartmentation especially critical. For landlords and managing agents, understanding fire door requirements in HMOs is not optional — it is a legal obligation with serious consequences for non-compliance.

Legal Requirements

Under the Housing Act 2004 and the Management of Houses in Multiple Occupation (England) Regulations 2006, landlords of licensable HMOs must ensure that the property has adequate fire precautions, including fire doors where required by the fire risk assessment. The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 applies to the common parts of HMOs and places duties on the landlord as the Responsible Person.

For licensed HMOs (typically properties with five or more occupants forming two or more households, or three or more storeys), the licensing conditions almost universally require FD30S fire doors (30-minute fire resistance with smoke seals) on every bedroom and on kitchens that open onto escape routes. Self-closing devices are mandatory. In many licensing schemes, the local authority specifies the exact door standard, including the type of intumescent strips, smoke seals, and closer required.

Which Doors Need a Fire Rating

As a general guide, the following doors in an HMO should be FD30S: all bedroom doors, the kitchen door (especially if the kitchen opens onto the only escape route), any door between a garage and the habitable space, and the door to any room containing a higher fire risk (such as a utility room with a tumble dryer). In larger or multi-storey HMOs, doors to protected stairways and corridors forming part of the means of escape also require FD30S rating. The fire risk assessment for the specific property will confirm the exact requirements.

Existing panel doors in older properties almost never meet FD30 standards, even if they are solid timber. The only reliable way to confirm a door's fire rating is through its certification label or third-party test evidence. Replacing non-compliant doors is one of the most common conditions attached to HMO licences, and failure to complete the work within the specified timeframe can result in licence revocation, unlimited fines, or prosecution.

Practical Considerations

Landlords should be aware that fire doors in HMO bedrooms are opened and closed frequently, and tenants will often object to self-closers on their bedroom doors. While the temptation is to remove the closer to keep tenants happy, this is illegal and dangerous. Modern closers can be adjusted to a lighter closing force that balances fire safety with day-to-day comfort. Some tenants may prop doors open — landlord inspections should check for this and educate tenants about the importance of keeping fire doors closed.

Budget for fire door maintenance as part of the annual property management plan. A fire door that was compliant when the HMO licence was granted can deteriorate within a year if not maintained. Include fire door checks in your periodic property inspections, and keep records that demonstrate ongoing compliance. If your local authority conducts a spot inspection and finds non-compliant fire doors, the consequences — enforcement notices, civil penalties of up to 30,000 pounds, or criminal prosecution — far outweigh the cost of proper maintenance.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Are fire doors a legal requirement in an HMO?

Yes. HMO landlords are duty-holders under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 and the Housing Act 2004, and the fire risk assessment will normally require fire doors to protected escape routes. In most HMOs this means FD30 (30-minute) doors to habitable rooms and kitchens opening onto the means of escape, fitted with self-closing devices.

Do HMO landlords have to inspect fire doors, and how often?

Yes. The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 require responsible persons in buildings over 11 metres tall to carry out quarterly checks of communal fire doors and annual checks of flat entrance doors. For HMOs below this height the regulations require best endeavours to provide door information, but the fire risk assessment will still set a routine inspection schedule, with many assessors recommending checks at least every six months.

What is the difference between FD30 and FD30S fire doors for an HMO?

FD30 means the door has been tested to resist fire for 30 minutes, while the 'S' in FD30S means it also has cold smoke seals to limit smoke leakage at ambient temperature. HMO habitable rooms and kitchens opening onto an escape route are typically specified as FD30S, since smoke is the biggest killer in a fire and most fire risk assessments call for smoke seals on these doors.

How do I prove an HMO fire door is certified and compliant?

Look for evidence the doorset was tested to BS 476-22 or BS EN 1634-1 and, ideally, third-party certification such as Certifire (Warringtonfire) or a BM TRADA Q-Mark, usually shown by a label or colour-coded plug in the door edge or top. Keep the certification documentation, as it is the simplest way to demonstrate compliance to a fire risk assessor or local authority.

What gap should there be around an HMO fire door?

BS 8214, the installation code of practice, recommends a consistent gap of around 3mm at the top and sides, and intumescent strips must be fitted so they expand to seal these gaps in a fire. Threshold gaps are typically larger but should follow the door manufacturer's tested specification, since incorrect gaps or missing seals are among the most common reasons HMO fire doors fail an inspection.

Can a landlord fit a fire door in an HMO themselves?

There is no legal bar to a competent person installing a fire door, but a fire door only performs as tested if it is installed correctly to BS 8214 with the right frame, seals, hinges and closer. Because a poorly fitted door can invalidate its fire rating and leave the landlord liable, many landlords use an installer certified under a scheme such as BM TRADA Q-Mark so the workmanship is independently assured.

Fire Door Range

About the author

Fire Door Range team

We supply certified FD30 and FD60 fire doors to landlords, contractors and housing providers across the UK. Every door is tested to BS 476 Part 22 with full Declarations of Performance, and our sister company C&C Fire Prevention Ltd handles FIRAS / BM TRADA certified installation. We write about the standards, regulations and practical decisions that shape day-to-day fire door specification — to help you get the right doors, fitted correctly, first time.

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