Fire Risk Assessment for Blocks of Flats in Nottingham

Fire Risk Assessment for Blocks of Flats in Nottingham | Nottingham Fire Assessments
🏢 Residential Block Specialists

Fire Risk Assessments for
Blocks of Flats in Nottingham

Legal compliance for freeholders, residents’ management companies and managing agents. Common areas assessed by qualified professionals. Bespoke quotes, fast turnaround.

48hrs
Typical report turnaround
100%
Qualified & vetted assessors
FSO
Fire Safety Order compliant
BSA
Building Safety Act aware
IFE/IFSM qualified assessors
Building Safety Act 2022 aware
All common areas covered
Managing agents welcome
Portfolio pricing available

Building Safety Act 2022: Higher-risk buildings of 7 storeys or 18 metres and above now fall under additional regulatory requirements, including mandatory registration with the Building Safety Regulator. Our assessors are familiar with the enhanced obligations.

What counts as a residential block?

The Fire Safety Order applies to the common areas of any building containing two or more domestic premises.

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Purpose-Built Blocks

Apartment buildings and purpose-built flat conversions with common areas including lifts, stairwells, corridors and entrance lobbies.

✓ Assessment required
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Converted Houses

Victorian and Edwardian terraced houses converted into two or more self-contained flats. Often have older fire separation requiring careful assessment.

✓ Assessment required
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Mixed-Use Buildings

Buildings with commercial premises on the ground floor and residential flats above. Both the commercial occupier and freeholder have separate obligations.

✓ Assessment required
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Sheltered & Retirement Housing

Purpose-built sheltered accommodation and retirement living blocks with additional requirements due to the vulnerability of occupants.

✓ Assessment required
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Residents’ Management Companies

Where leaseholders have taken over management via an RMC, company directors become responsible persons and carry the legal obligation.

✓ Assessment required
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Managing Agent Portfolios

Managing agents acting on behalf of freeholders or RTM companies. Portfolio pricing available for multiple blocks across Nottingham.

✓ Portfolio pricing available

Who is responsible — and what does it mean?

Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, anyone responsible for the common areas of a residential block must have a written fire risk assessment carried out by a competent person. This is not optional.

The ‘responsible person’ is usually the freeholder, but can be a residents’ management company or the managing agent acting on their behalf. The freeholder cannot transfer their legal liability to a managing agent — they remain accountable regardless.

The Fire Safety Act 2021 extended scope to explicitly include flat entrance doors and the building’s external walls. Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Service can issue enforcement notices where assessments are absent or out of date.

Your key obligations as responsible person

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Written assessmentMust be documented. A verbal review does not satisfy the legal requirement.
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Competent assessorIFE/IFSM membership is a recognised marker of competence.
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Kept up to dateMust be reviewed when anything changes and at regular intervals (typically annually).
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Share findings with residentsRelevant findings must be communicated to anyone at risk, including leaseholders and tenants.
Act on recommendationsAn assessment that sits in a drawer is not compliance. Actions must be implemented within appropriate timescales.

Simple from start to finish

We keep the process straightforward so you can focus on managing your building, not chasing paperwork.

1

Get a quote

Tell us about the block — number of storeys, units, and any known concerns. We respond within 2 business hours.

2

Book a visit

We match you with a qualified assessor local to Nottingham. Most blocks assessed within 5–10 working days.

3

Site assessment

Your assessor inspects all common areas and documents findings. Access to individual flats is not required.

4

Written report

A clear written report within 48 hours. Findings graded by risk priority so you know what to address first.

5

Annual reminder

We remind you when your next review is due — your compliance stays current without you having to track it.

Every block is different — so is the price

The cost depends on storeys, units, complexity of common areas, and whether the Building Safety Act applies. We don’t publish a generic price list because a bespoke quote is always more accurate.

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Size & storeys

The number of floors and units directly affects time on site and the scope of the written report.

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Building complexity

Car parks, plant rooms, multiple staircases and mixed-use elements all add scope.

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Regulatory tier

Higher-risk buildings (7 storeys / 18m+) require additional consideration under the Building Safety Act 2022.

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Portfolio discounts

Managing agents with multiple blocks across Nottingham can access portfolio pricing.

Get a quote for your block

Tell us the postcode, number of flats, and number of storeys. We’ll come back with a clear price within 2 business hours.

Get a Quote →

The regulatory framework for residential blocks

Fire Safety Order 2005

The primary legislation requiring a fire risk assessment for all common areas. Applies to any building containing two or more domestic premises.

Fire Safety Act 2021

Extended scope to include the structure, external walls (including cladding) and all flat entrance doors.

Building Safety Act 2022

Introduced the Building Safety Regulator and new requirements for higher-risk buildings of 7 storeys or 18m+.

PAS 79-1:2020

The British Standard specification for fire risk assessments. Our assessors work to this standard and reference it in all reports.

Frequently asked questions

Is a fire risk assessment legally required for a block of flats?
Yes. Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, all common areas of residential blocks must have a written fire risk assessment carried out by a competent person. The Building Safety Act 2022 introduced additional requirements for higher-risk buildings of 7 storeys or 18m+.
Who is responsible for the fire risk assessment?
The ‘responsible person’ is legally accountable — typically the freeholder, residents’ management company, or managing agent. Freeholders cannot delegate their legal liability even if a managing agent handles day-to-day management.
Does the assessment cover individual flats?
No. The assessment covers common areas only — corridors, stairwells, bin stores, car parks, plant rooms and shared spaces. Flat entrance doors now fall within scope following the Fire Safety Act 2021.
How often should a block be assessed?
Most blocks should be reviewed annually or whenever there is a significant change. We send an annual reminder so you don’t have to track it yourself.
How much does it cost?
Every block is different, so we quote based on your specific building. The main factors are storeys, units, complexity, and whether the Building Safety Act applies. Contact us for a bespoke price within 2 business hours.
We’re a managing agent — can you assess multiple blocks?
Yes. We offer portfolio pricing for agents managing three or more blocks and can coordinate annual reviews across your portfolio.

Get a quote for your block

Tell us about your building and we’ll come back with a clear price. No obligation, no pushy follow-up.

Request a quote

We’ll respond within 2 business hours during the working day.

🔒 Your details are only used to respond to your enquiry.