Closing the Fire Door Gap: Building Safer Environemnts Through Inspection, Training and Preventive Action
Few elements in fire safety present as visible a compliance challenge as fire doors. Unlike many fire safety measures where systems often remain unseen, fire doors are front facing components used constantly by building occupants. Because fire doors are moving components, they are uniquely vulnerable and require maintenance to ensure functionality, effectiveness and compliance.
A fire door’s primary purpose is to act as a barrier in the event of a fire, protecting potential escape routes and limiting fire and smoke spread long enough for those within the affected building to safely evacuate.
Yet the day-to-day demands placed on these doors, particularly in high traffic environments, make them susceptible to deterioration, misuse and adjustment drift. Over time, even minor changes can compromise compartmentation.
A common failure is simple misalignment. For example, when a door falls out of adjustment, the risk of more significant damage increases substantially. What might have been an easy maintenance task becomes a costly remediation or even a full door set replacement.
This escalation happens because the underlying issues compound; a misaligned door is forced, catches on frames and puts stress on ironmongery. Without scheduled checks, these defects escalate.
Compliance and competency
However, the physical condition of the door is often only half the challenge. Many compliance failures stem not from the door itself but from how it is used. In environments such as hotels, schools, purposebuilt student accommodation (PBSA) facilities and hospitals, it is common to see fire doors propped open.
Staff moving equipment, housekeeping pushing trolleys or occupants simply wanting convenience often wedge open cross corridor doors. These actions render the door ineffective during a fire.
As stated in section 5.2 of the Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022: fire door guidance, all fire doors should be kept shut when not in use, residents or their guests should not tamper with self-closing devices and residents should report any fault or damage immediately to the responsible person.
Misuse often reflects a broader compliance gap. Even when responsible persons are in place, knowledge is not consistently embedded across the organisation. Without an organisation-wide culture of compliance, minor issues can quickly escalate into major risks.
Beyond use, misunderstanding of inspection and certification contributes to persistent failure rates. Anyone can download an inspection checklist, but this does not equate to competence and understanding. Identifying the cause of issues requires experience, technical understanding and specialised training.
Ensuring quality in fire services
The industry is also saturated with companies offering passive fire services without the necessary third-party accreditation. In these situations, work may be completed by individuals who lack the skills, knowledge and experience.
In some cases, they perform unnecessary remediation because they do not fully understand alternative compliant routes. In others, they undertake work that inadvertently compromises fire performance.
The purpose of surveys is also often misunderstood by clients themselves. Some are undertaken simply to “tick a box” during annual assessments, with no intention of addressing the findings.
Others are more strategically motivated and aimed at identifying latent defects or supporting claims against installers. Without understanding why a survey is commissioned, outputs become misaligned with organisational goals and compliance outcomes suffer.
Rectifying issues
The most effective remedy to persistent fire door compliance issues is the establishment of a robust, well informed and competence driven inspection regime. Competent inspectors apply skills, knowledge, experience and behaviour (SKEB) to provide accurate routes to compliance.
A competent inspection can identify the manufacturer’s certification details on the door leaf and frame, verify that maintenance or past remediation works were completed in accordance with certification and distinguish defects arising from misuse, structural issues, environmental exposure or installation errors.
A competent inspector should not take the easy route of condemning every door or marking difficult ones as “no access.” They must approach each door with an understanding of its role in the building, how it is used and the operational constraints of the client.
In large scale replacement projects, such as hotels undergoing refurbishment, competent planning prevents operational paralysis.
Coordinating with other contractors, sequencing works to minimise downtime and considering the risks associated with installing doors before or after internal fit outs all require experience. These are the nuances that separate basic inspection from holistic, competent fire door management.
Ultimately, competent inspection creates the bridge between legislative requirements and practical, operationally sensitive solutions. It prevents unnecessary cost, ensures building safety and supports responsible persons in maintaining compliant environments.
Building competence
To address the industry’s competence gap, organisations must invest in structured, accredited fire door inspection training. Global HSE’s Fire Door Inspection Qualification, delivered through the Global Academy, is designed specifically to develop meaningful competence.
The course provides understanding of fire door systems and components, knowledge of certification, installation standards and maintenance requirements, skills to identify complex or non-obvious defects and the ability to differentiate between compliant, repairable and non-repairable conditions.
For organisations, the qualification supports a culture of embedded compliance and empowers staff to recognise misuse, understand the implications and take appropriate action long before small issues become significant risks.
By building internal competence, organisations reduce reliance on external corrective work, lower long-term costs and significantly improve life safety performance.
Fire door compliance is not a singular challenge but a convergence of operational pressures, knowledge gaps, technical misunderstandings and skills shortages.
By upskilling staff through accredited training, organisations can transform their approach from reactive remediation to proactive and informed fire safety management, ultimately protecting both lives and assets.