Fire alarm installation
cost UK — 2026 guide

Fire alarm installation costs vary enormously — from a few hundred pounds for a small office to tens of thousands for a large commercial building. The figures on this page give a broad indication of what to expect. They are not quotes and will vary depending on your specific premises, location, and chosen contractor.

Fire Alarm Installation — Rough Cost Summary

The figures below represent typical installed costs in 2026 for a professionally designed and fitted fire alarm system, inclusive of equipment, labour, commissioning, and certification. They assume a straightforward installation by a BAFE-accredited contractor.

Premises TypeTypical SizeSystem TypeRough Installed Cost
Small retail unit or cafe50–150 m²Conventional L3–L4£800 – £1,800
Small office (single floor)100–250 m²Conventional or addressable L3£1,200 – £3,000
Restaurant or pub150–400 m²Addressable L2–L3£2,000 – £5,000
Medium office or light industrial250–750 m²Addressable L2–L3£3,000 – £8,000
Hotel (small to medium)500–1,500 m²Addressable L1–L2£6,000 – £18,000
School or academy1,000–4,000 m²Addressable L1£10,000 – £35,000
Large warehouse or factory1,000 m²+Addressable P1–L2£8,000 – £30,000+
Block of flats (common areas)VariesAddressable L4–L2£3,000 – £15,000+

A Note on These Figures

These are broad mid-market indications for a competent, certified installation. You will find cheaper quotes — but a fire alarm that does not meet BS 5839-1 because corners were cut on design or components is not a system you can rely on. The cheapest quote is rarely the right one when life safety is involved. Prices vary by region too — London and the South East typically run 15–25% higher than the national average.


Conventional vs Addressable — What is the Difference in Cost?

FeatureConventionalAddressable
How it worksDetectors wired in zones — panel shows which zone has activatedEach device has a unique address — panel shows exact device location
Typical cost (medium premises)Lower — £1,500–£4,000Higher — £3,000–£8,000+
Suited toSmall, simple buildings with few zonesMedium to large, complex, or multi-floor buildings
Fault findingZone-level onlyDevice-level precision
ScalabilityLimitedEasily expanded
False alarm managementBasicAdvanced cause-and-effect programming

What Affects the Price?

FactorImpact on Cost
Size and complexity of the buildingMore floor area means more detectors, more cabling, and more labour time
System category requiredAn L1 system requires far more devices than an L3 or L4 — the fire risk assessment determines what is appropriate
Type of constructionSolid masonry walls, listed buildings, suspended ceilings all add installation complexity
New installation vs upgradeReplacing an existing system is often cheaper — though not always, if old wiring needs replacing
Interfaces and integrationsDoor release mechanisms, lift recall, suppression systems all add to design complexity and cost
LocationLondon and South East typically 15–25% above the national average
Out-of-hours workingInstallation outside business hours attracts premium labour rates
Wireless vs wiredWireless systems reduce installation time in occupied buildings but equipment costs are higher

Domestic Fire Alarm Costs

Property TypeTypical SystemRough Installed Cost
Small house or flatGrade D, Cat. LD2 — 2–4 interlinked alarms£200 – £500
Larger detached houseGrade D, Cat. LD1 — 5–8 interlinked alarms£400 – £900
Small HMO (3–4 bedrooms)Grade D/C, Cat. LD2£800 – £2,000
Larger HMO (5–8 bedrooms)Grade B/A, Cat. LD1–LD2£2,000 – £5,000
Sheltered or supported housingGrade A with panel, Cat. LD1£1,500 – £4,000+

HMO Landlords — Know Your Obligations

If you rent out a property as an HMO, the fire alarm requirements are significantly more stringent than for a standard domestic property. Your local authority licensing conditions will specify the minimum Grade and Category required. Getting this wrong can invalidate your licence and expose you to substantial fines. Always commission a fire risk assessment before specifying the system.


Do Not Forget the Ongoing Costs

Cost ItemFrequencyTypical Annual Cost
Six-monthly servicing (small premises)2x per year£200 – £500 p.a.
Six-monthly servicing (medium premises)2x per year£400 – £1,200 p.a.
Six-monthly servicing (large premises)2x per year£1,000 – £3,500 p.a.
Alarm receiving centre monitoringAnnual contract£200 – £600 p.a.
Reactive call-outs and repairsAs required£80 – £150 per hour
Battery replacementsEvery 3–5 years£150 – £600 per cycle
Detector replacement at end of lifeEvery 10–12 yearsVaries widely

How to Get a Sensible Quote

1

Get a Design Specification First

Without a design specification, contractors will be quoting for different things and you will not be comparing like for like. A fire risk assessment or independent design spec is the starting point.

2

Get at Least Three Quotes

From BAFE SP203-1 accredited or NSI/SSAIB certified companies. Accreditation is not a guarantee of the best price, but it is a meaningful quality filter.

3

Ensure Quotes are Itemised

Equipment, labour, commissioning, and certification should be listed separately so you can understand what you are paying for.

4

Confirm the System Category

An L4 system is not the same as an L1 system. If quotes differ significantly in price, check that the scope of detection coverage is the same across all of them.

5

Ask What Certification is Provided

A compliant installation should result in a commissioning certificate and as-installed drawings, not just a verbal assurance.

Red Flags to Watch For

Be cautious of any contractor who quotes without visiting the site, cannot confirm BAFE or NSI/SSAIB accreditation, provides a quote substantially lower than all others without explanation, or cannot tell you which BS 5839 category of system they are quoting for.

Price information: All figures shown are broad indications based on typical market rates in early 2026. Actual costs will vary depending on your specific premises, location, system specification, and chosen contractor. Always obtain detailed quotes from certified companies before committing to any expenditure. Last reviewed January 2026.

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