Yes. Every church and place of worship in England and Wales must have a suitable and sufficient Fire Risk Assessment. This is not optional, and it applies regardless of whether you have paid employees, how old the building is, or how infrequently it is used.
The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 โ usually called "the Fire Safety Order" or "the RRO" โ is the primary fire safety legislation for non-domestic premises in England and Wales. It replaced over 70 pieces of previous fire safety legislation and came into force in October 2006.
Under Article 9 of the Order, the responsible person for any non-domestic premises must carry out โ or arrange for a competent person to carry out โ a suitable and sufficient assessment of the fire risks to people on or near the premises. Churches and places of worship are explicitly non-domestic premises, and there are no exemptions based on size, frequency of use, or charitable status.
Who is the "responsible person" for a church? Usually the vicar, minister, church warden, or the trustees/PCC collectively. If your building is owned by a denomination (such as the Church of England or the Methodist Church), there may be shared responsibility between the local leadership and the denominational body. When in doubt, responsibility falls on whoever has control of the building.
This is probably the most widespread misunderstanding. The Fire Safety Order applies to the premises, not to whether you are an employer. If members of the public โ including your congregation โ use the building, you have legal duties. The presence or absence of paid employees is irrelevant to your fire safety obligations.
A Fire Risk Assessment is a proactive requirement, not a reactive one. You cannot wait until a fire occurs to discover whether your arrangements are adequate. The law requires you to identify and manage risks in advance. A building that has "never had a problem" may simply have been lucky โ and luck is not a defence in an enforcement notice or prosecution.
Before the 2006 changeover, many churches held a Fire Certificate issued under the old Fire Precautions Act. These certificates no longer have any legal effect. They were abolished when the RRO came into force. If your church is relying on a document that pre-dates October 2006, you do not have a current Fire Risk Assessment.
Churches are not straightforward buildings to assess. They carry specific fire safety challenges that a generic or tick-box assessment will miss:
Fire safety in places of worship is enforced by your local Fire and Rescue Service. Inspectors have the right to enter your premises at any reasonable time without notice. Where they find inadequate arrangements, they can issue:
In serious cases, the responsible person can face prosecution and an unlimited fine. It is also worth noting that many church insurers now require an up-to-date Fire Risk Assessment as a condition of cover โ failure to have one could invalidate your policy.
Insurance implications: Ecclesiastical Insurance โ the UK's largest insurer of churches โ and most other denominational insurers now ask about Fire Risk Assessments at renewal. If you cannot produce a current assessment and a fire occurs, your insurer may have grounds to dispute a claim. This is a significant financial risk for any congregation.
A Fire Risk Assessment is not a one-off exercise. The law requires it to be reviewed whenever there is reason to believe it is no longer valid โ for example, after a change to the building, a change in use, a change in the people who use it, or simply the passage of time. As a practical guide, most assessors recommend a full review every one to three years for a typical church, with an annual check of the key findings.
A competent Fire Risk Assessment for a church will go well beyond a checklist. It will examine the specific activities that take place in the building, the characteristics of the people who use it, the condition of the fabric, and the arrangements in place for detecting, warning and evacuating. It will produce a written report with clearly prioritised actions โ and it should be understandable by a non-specialist.
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