
New measures strengthen fire installation oversight, inspection procedures and public training frameworks amid heightened fire safety focus
The Hong Kong Fire Services Department has introduced a suite of updated procedures and regulatory changes affecting inspection practices, contractor licensing requirements and training initiatives as part of a broader effort to strengthen fire safety across the territory.
The department has issued new circulars that take effect immediately, requiring registered fire service installation contractors to adopt enhanced transparency and operational standards for fire service equipment and installations.
Under the updated requirements, contractors must place visible notices on any fire service equipment — such as hose reels and manual call points — that is damaged or not in effective working order to ensure building occupants and management clearly understand the status of critical safety systems.
Contractors are also obliged to affix coded tapes to equipment power switches to prevent accidental shut-offs and to make it easier for property managers to identify power status during routine checks.
In addition, before any fire service equipment is taken offline for maintenance or works, contractors must assess and report potential impacts on interconnected systems to the Fire Services Department and provide detailed public notices listing closure dates, affected systems and other relevant information at prominent locations in buildings.
Failure to comply with the new transparency and reporting standards may lead to disciplinary action against contractors, including removal from the registered contractors’ list.
These changes build on a broader intensification of inspection and enforcement operations, including citywide fire safety inspections of high-risk commercial buildings and targeted compliance checks on older residential and mixed-use premises.
The Fire Services Department has also been publicising training opportunities and certification pathways for industry personnel and the general public to improve emergency preparedness and fire safety competency.
A dedicated public training portal offers one-stop access to courses ranging from basic community fire safety awareness to professional and voluntary certification programmes for technicians.
The cumulative effect of these regulatory and training updates underscores the department’s strategic priority to raise fire safety standards, improve compliance through transparency and empower both professionals and members of the public with the knowledge to identify and respond to fire risks effectively.
The department has issued new circulars that take effect immediately, requiring registered fire service installation contractors to adopt enhanced transparency and operational standards for fire service equipment and installations.
Under the updated requirements, contractors must place visible notices on any fire service equipment — such as hose reels and manual call points — that is damaged or not in effective working order to ensure building occupants and management clearly understand the status of critical safety systems.
Contractors are also obliged to affix coded tapes to equipment power switches to prevent accidental shut-offs and to make it easier for property managers to identify power status during routine checks.
In addition, before any fire service equipment is taken offline for maintenance or works, contractors must assess and report potential impacts on interconnected systems to the Fire Services Department and provide detailed public notices listing closure dates, affected systems and other relevant information at prominent locations in buildings.
Failure to comply with the new transparency and reporting standards may lead to disciplinary action against contractors, including removal from the registered contractors’ list.
These changes build on a broader intensification of inspection and enforcement operations, including citywide fire safety inspections of high-risk commercial buildings and targeted compliance checks on older residential and mixed-use premises.
The Fire Services Department has also been publicising training opportunities and certification pathways for industry personnel and the general public to improve emergency preparedness and fire safety competency.
A dedicated public training portal offers one-stop access to courses ranging from basic community fire safety awareness to professional and voluntary certification programmes for technicians.
The cumulative effect of these regulatory and training updates underscores the department’s strategic priority to raise fire safety standards, improve compliance through transparency and empower both professionals and members of the public with the knowledge to identify and respond to fire risks effectively.






































