Site fire plan builder
Build a construction site fire plan: tick the ignition sources present and work through detection, escape, fire-fighting and emergency procedures. The builder assembles a printable plan from the sections you complete.
Free to use — no signup, nothing stored. Use as a planning aid, then review against the actual site.
Complete document
PDFbuild it section by section below
Site & responsible person
Date: 6 June 2026 (set automatically for the printed plan).
Ignition sources present
Tick the sources of ignition on this site. Each one adds the controls it needs to your plan, and matches the right fire-fighting equipment to the risk.
Even with no high-risk source ticked, the standing sections below still apply to every construction site.
Combustibles & fuel storage
Keeping the fuel for a fire off the site and away from the building.
Detection & warning
How a fire is detected and how everyone is alerted.
Means of escape
Getting everyone out — routes, lighting and where they gather.
Emergency procedures
Calling the fire service and cutting off the supplies.
Coordination & inductions
Sharing the plan and controlling high-risk work.
Fire-fighting equipment
These extinguisher types are matched to the risks you ticked above. Record the actual locations on site in the notes box below.
- Fire points with water / foam extinguishers for general (Class A) combustibles, located on escape routes and at high-risk areas, signed and unobstructed.
- Fire-fighting equipment checked weekly (and after use), with a record kept; everyone shown the nearest fire point at induction.
A site fire plan is not a premises fire risk assessment
These two documents are often confused. A fire risk assessment (FRA) is the legal duty of the “responsible person” for an occupied or completed building under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (RRFSO). A site fire plan sets out the fire safety arrangements for the construction phase — the period while the building is being built, refurbished or demolished, when ignition sources, combustibles and escape routes change week to week.
On a construction site the controlling duties sit under the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM) and the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order, with HSE’s HSG168 ‘Fire safety in construction’ as the principal guidance. The construction phase plan that CDM requires should describe how fire risk is managed; this builder helps you set those arrangements out clearly.
What HSG168 expects you to cover
HSG168 frames construction fire safety around removing or controlling ignition sources (hot works, temporary electrics and charging, heaters, smoking, bitumen boilers, refuelling), keeping combustibles and fuel away from the building, and making sure that if a fire does start, people can be warned and can escape while the fire service is called and can reach the site. The plan should be reviewed as the works progress, because the risks and the available escape routes change as the building goes up or comes down.
Hot works are the highest-risk activity on most sites. HSE expects a permit system, removal or protection of combustibles, and a dedicated fire watch. A continuous fire watch must be kept for at least 60 minutes after the last flame, with a further check two hours after work stops, and all hot works finished well before the end of the working day so those checks can be done before the site is left empty.
Timber-frame and refurbishment work carry elevated risk
Fire risk is far higher on timber-frame construction and on refurbishment of existing buildings — exposed structural timber, combustible insulation, voids that let fire spread unseen, and in refurbishment work an occupied or partly occupied building next door. A serious timber-frame or refurbishment fire can destroy the structure and spread to neighbouring buildings, so these projects warrant extra controls (tighter hot-works limits, faster detection, separation distances) and, where the building is occupied or complex, a proper fire risk assessment by a competent assessor in addition to the site plan.
What this builder does — and does not — do
This tool helps you document the arrangements for a construction site fire plan in a clear, printable form. It does not certify that those arrangements are adequate: whether your controls suit the actual site, building stage and surroundings is a competent-person judgement. Occupied, high-rise or complex premises need a separate fire risk assessment carried out by a competent assessor.
Further reading: HSE’s fire safety in construction and hot works / process fire pages, and the full guidance in HSG168.
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