Fire Safety Standards for British Roofs: Approved Document B Explained
Technical Guide

Fire Safety Standards for British Roofs: Approved Document B Explained

Building Regulations Part B requires Class A roof coverings for fire safety. Learn about fire resistance ratings, thatch regulations, and compliance requirements.

By BookMyRoofer Team • 10 February 2026

Fire safety is a critical but often overlooked aspect of roof design. Technical Guidance Document Part B (Fire Safety) sets strict requirements for roof coverings, fire resistance, and escape routes in British buildings.

Approved Document B: Fire Safety Requirements

Section 14: Roof Coverings

Primary requirement: External roof surfaces must resist fire spread from outside the building.

Classification system:

  • Class AA, AB, AC: Highest fire resistance (slates, tiles, metal)
  • Class BA, BB, BC: Moderate resistance (some membranes)
  • Class CA, CB, CC: Lower resistance (requires fire-rated substrate)
  • Class DA, DB, DC: Not permitted on dwellings

Source: gov.uk Technical Guidance Document Part B

National Annexes to BS EN 13501-5

Test method: Roof coverings tested for:

  1. External fire exposure (burning brands, radiant heat)
  2. Fire penetration (time to breach roof assembly)
  3. Fire spread (flame propagation across surface)

British requirement: Roof coverings on dwellings must achieve Class B ROOF (t1) minimum.

Common Roof Material Fire Ratings

Class AA (Highest Fire Resistance)

Natural slate – Non-combustible
Clay tiles – Non-combustible
Concrete tiles – Non-combustible
Metal roofing (steel, zinc, copper) – Non-combustible

Compliance: Automatically compliant with Part B. No additional certification needed.

Class AB/AC

Bituminous felt (multi-layer with mineral surface)
EPDM membrane (on fire-rated substrate)
GRP fibreglass (with fire-retardant resin)

Compliance: Manufacturer must provide fire test certificate (BS EN 13501-5).

Class CA–CC (Restricted Use)

⚠️ Single-layer membranes (without fire-rated deck)
⚠️ PVC/TPO (without Class A substrate)
⚠️ Timber shingles (not permitted on dwellings)

Compliance: Requires fire-rated substrate (e.g., 18mm plywood + Type X plasterboard ceiling).

Special Case: Thatch Roofs

Part B Section 13: Thatch requires:

  • Minimum 1m separation from boundaries
  • No habitable rooms in roof space
  • Electrical wiring in steel conduit
  • Chimney flues lined and swept annually

Insurance: Specialist thatch insurance required (higher premiums due to fire risk).

Fire Resistance of Roof Structure

Roof Deck/Sarking

Requirement: Provide 30 minutes fire resistance (minimum) for dwellings.

Compliant systems:

  • 18mm OSB/plywood deck + 12.5mm plasterboard ceiling
  • Concrete slab (flat roofs)
  • Timber joists with fire-rated insulation

Non-compliant:

  • Exposed timber rafters (no ceiling)
  • Sarking felt only (no deck)

Insulation Materials

Fire safety concern: Some insulation is combustible.

Compliant materials:Mineral wool (Rockwool/Knauf) – Non-combustible
Glass wool – Non-combustible
PIR boards with foil facings – Fire-retardant (Class B/C)

Restricted materials: ⚠️ Expanded polystyrene (EPS) – Combustible (Class E)
⚠️ Spray foam – Fire rating varies (check certification)

Compliance: Use non-combustible insulation in fire-sensitive areas (attached dwellings, multi-unit).

Fire Safety in Multi-Unit Developments

Apartment Buildings (>3 Storeys)

Part B Section 6: Roofs must provide 60 minutes fire resistance.

Requirements:

  • Concrete roof deck (flat roofs)
  • Fire-rated separating walls extended through roof
  • No timber roof structure unless fire-rated

Inspection: Fire Safety Certificate required before construction.

Terraced/Semi-Detached Houses

Part B Section 3.7: Party walls must extend 375mm above roof covering.

Purpose: Prevent fire spread between dwellings through roof space.

Compliance:

  • Brick/block wall through roof line
  • Cavity barriers at eaves
  • Fire-stopped penetrations (pipes, cables)

Fire Escapes & Roof Access

Dormer Windows as Escape Routes

Part B Section 2: Dormer windows can serve as escape routes if:

  • Minimum 450mm × 450mm opening
  • Sill height ≤1,100mm from floor
  • Opens directly to outside (not into roof valley)

Typical use: Attic conversions, room-in-roof bedrooms.

Roof Lights (Velux/Skylights)

Not acceptable as primary escape route (unless horizontal, e.g., flat roof exit).

Reason: Climbing onto pitched roof is not a safe escape method.

Compliance & Certification

For Homeowners

Replacing roof on existing house:

  • Use Class AA materials (slate/tile) = automatic compliance
  • Keep Fire Safety Certificate (if original build had one)
  • Ensure roofer doesn’t remove party wall fire barriers

Building an extension:

  • Architect/engineer designs fire-rated roof assembly
  • Building Control inspects before roof covering installed
  • Building Notice submitted 14 days before work

For Contractors

Documentation required:

  • Manufacturer fire test certificates (membranes, insulation)
  • CE marking (roof coverings)
  • Fire Safety Certificate (multi-unit/commercial buildings)

Inspection checkpoints:

  • Party wall continuity through roof
  • Fire-stopped penetrations (chimneys, pipes, cables)
  • Roof covering classification

FAQ: Fire Safety & British Roofs

Q: Are slate roofs safer than tile roofs?

A: Both natural slate and clay/concrete tiles are Class AA (non-combustible). Fire safety is equal. The difference is structural (slate is lighter).

Q: Can I use a green roof (sedum) on my house?

A: Yes – the substrate (soil/growing medium) is non-combustible, but the waterproof membrane must be Class B ROOF (t1). Check manufacturer certification.

Q: Do I need smoke detectors in the attic?

A: No – smoke alarms are required in circulation areas (hallways, landings) and rooms where people sleep. Uninhabited attics don’t require detectors.

Q: What if my roof has solar panels?

A: Solar PV panels are combustible (Class C/D). Building Regulations allow them if:

  • Mounted on Class AA roof covering (slate/tile)
  • Minimum 1m from roof edges/ridges
  • Electrical installation by registered electrician

A: Yes, if fire-rated. Some spray foams achieve Class B/C fire rating. Always request manufacturer certification. Avoid cheap non-certified products.

When to Get a Fire Safety Certificate

Required for:

  • New builds (all dwellings)
  • Extensions >40m²
  • Material changes of use (e.g., house → apartments)
  • Multi-unit developments

Not required for:

  • Like-for-like roof replacement
  • Attic insulation upgrades
  • Roof repairs

Process: Architect/engineer submits application to Building Control Authority → inspection during construction → Certificate of Compliance on Completion.

Fire Prevention Best Practices

  1. Chimney maintenance – Sweep annually, repair cracked flues
  2. Electrical safety – Repair damaged cables in attic, avoid overloading sockets
  3. Clear debris – Remove leaves/moss from valleys (fire risk in dry weather)
  4. Solar panel installation – Use registered Energy Saving Trust contractor

Need a roofer who understands fire safety regulations? Get quotes from certified professionals


Official Sources

  1. Approved Document B (Fire Safety) – https://www.gov.uk/housing/building-standards/technical-guidance-documents
  2. BS EN 13501-5:2016 Fire Classification – https://www.nsai.co.uk/
  3. Building Control Act 2007 – https://www.legislation.gov.uk/eli/2007/act/21/enacted/en/html
  4. Fire Safety in Purpose-Built Blocks of Flats (DHLGH 2023) – https://www.gov.uk/

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fire safetybuilding regulationspart bcomplianceroof materials

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