Fire Watch Security in California: Requirements, Costs & What Property Owners Must Know
A fire alarm goes down on a Friday afternoon. A sprinkler system fails inspection during a tenant buildout. Hot work starts on the third floor of a building with no suppression system. In each of these scenarios, California law requires one thing before anyone can move forward: a fire watch.
Fire watch is one of the most misunderstood requirements in commercial property management and construction. Property owners and general contractors know they need it, but the specifics around when, how long, who qualifies, and what happens if you skip it are where costly mistakes happen.
This guide covers everything California property owners, facility managers, and construction professionals need to know about fire watch security.
What Is Fire Watch?
Fire watch is a temporary fire safety measure where a trained individual continuously patrols a building or work area to detect and respond to fire hazards. The fire watch guard's job is to identify fire risks, alert building occupants if a fire starts, and notify the fire department immediately.
Fire watch guards are not a substitute for a working fire suppression system. They are a temporary safety measure required by law when normal fire protection systems are impaired, out of service, or not yet installed.
A qualified fire watch guard must carry specific equipment and maintain detailed logs throughout their shift, including the time of each patrol round, the areas inspected, and any hazards observed. These logs are not optional. Fire marshals can and do request them during inspections, and missing or incomplete logs can result in citations.
When Is Fire Watch Required in California?
California follows the California Fire Code (Title 24, Part 9), which adopts the International Fire Code with state amendments. Fire watch is triggered under several specific circumstances:
1. Impaired Fire Protection Systems
When a fire alarm, sprinkler system, or fire suppression system is out of service for more than four hours in a 24-hour period, fire watch must be initiated. This applies to planned maintenance, unexpected failures, and system upgrades.
2. Hot Work Operations
Any welding, cutting, brazing, or soldering that produces sparks or open flames requires a fire watch during the work and for a minimum of 30 minutes after the work concludes. OSHA standard 1926.352 mandates this for construction sites, and California's fire code reinforces it.
3. New Construction Without Fire Suppression
Buildings under construction that have not yet had fire protection systems installed may require fire watch, particularly when combustible materials are present or when the local fire marshal determines the risk level warrants it.
4. Buildings with Code Violations
If a fire marshal finds code violations that create an imminent fire hazard, they can order a fire watch to remain in place until the violations are corrected. This is common in older buildings undergoing renovation.
5. Special Events and High-Occupancy Situations
Large gatherings in venues that exceed normal occupancy levels or use pyrotechnics, open flames, or temporary structures may require fire watch personnel as a condition of the event permit.
What Are the Actual Requirements for Fire Watch Guards?
Not just anyone can serve as a fire watch guard. California has specific requirements:
- Training: Fire watch personnel must be trained in the use of fire extinguishers and the building's fire safety procedures. Many jurisdictions require documented proof of training.
- Dedicated Assignment: The fire watch guard must be exclusively assigned to fire watch duties. They cannot also be performing other security tasks, construction work, or building maintenance at the same time.
- Communication Equipment: Guards must have a reliable means to immediately contact the fire department, typically a cell phone or two-way radio.
- Patrol Frequency: Most fire marshals require patrol rounds at least every 15 to 30 minutes, though some high-risk situations may require continuous patrol of a specific area.
- Fire Watch Log: A written log must be maintained documenting each patrol round, the time, the areas checked, and any observations. These logs must be available for inspection at all times.
- Fire Extinguisher Access: Portable fire extinguishers must be readily available in the fire watch area, and the guard must know how to use them.
How Much Does Fire Watch Cost in California?
Fire watch costs vary depending on several factors, but property owners should budget realistically to avoid unpleasant surprises.
| Factor | Impact on Cost |
|---|---|
| Standard business hours | $25 - $45 per hour per guard |
| After-hours, weekends, holidays | $35 - $60 per hour per guard |
| Emergency/same-day deployment | Premium rates, often 1.5x standard |
| Multiple guards (large buildings) | Per-guard rate applies to each |
| Extended duration (weeks/months) | Volume discounts may apply |
The real cost of fire watch is not the hourly rate. It is the cost of not having it. A fire marshal can issue a stop-work order on a construction site that does not have required fire watch in place. For a large commercial project, a single day of stop-work can cost tens of thousands of dollars in delayed construction, idle crews, and missed deadlines.
Similarly, a building owner who fails to maintain fire watch when their suppression system is down can face fines ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars per day, depending on the jurisdiction. In the event of an actual fire, the liability exposure for not having required fire watch is enormous.
Common Mistakes That Lead to Violations
After years of providing fire watch services, certain patterns emerge. These are the most common mistakes we see:
Using Unqualified Personnel
Assigning a construction worker or building maintenance staff to "keep an eye out" does not satisfy the fire watch requirement. The person must be dedicated to fire watch duties and properly trained. Fire marshals will ask for credentials and training documentation.
Incomplete or Missing Logs
Fire watch logs are your proof of compliance. If you cannot produce complete, detailed logs showing consistent patrol rounds, you might as well not have had fire watch at all in the eyes of the fire marshal. Every gap in the log is a potential citation.
Delayed Response to System Impairments
The four-hour window is not a grace period to ignore the problem. Property managers should have a fire watch provider on speed dial and a plan in place for rapid deployment when systems go down.
Not Notifying the Fire Marshal
Many jurisdictions require property owners to notify the fire marshal when a fire protection system is taken out of service and when fire watch is initiated. Failing to make this notification is itself a violation, even if you have fire watch in place.
Ending Fire Watch Too Early
Fire watch cannot end until the fire protection system is fully restored and tested, or until the hot work area has been monitored for the required cool-down period. Ending fire watch prematurely because a system "seems to be working" is a violation waiting to happen.
How to Choose a Fire Watch Security Provider
Not all security companies are equipped to handle fire watch. When evaluating providers, look for these qualifications:
- BSIS Licensed: The company must hold a valid California Bureau of Security and Investigative Services (BSIS) license. This is non-negotiable.
- Fire Watch Training Program: Ask specifically about their fire watch training curriculum. Generic security guard training is not sufficient.
- Rapid Deployment Capability: Fire watch situations are often emergencies. Your provider should be able to have a guard on-site within hours, not days.
- Professional Documentation: Ask to see a sample fire watch log. A provider using detailed, professional log forms demonstrates that they understand the compliance requirements.
- Insurance Coverage: Verify that the company carries adequate general liability insurance and workers' compensation coverage. Fire watch involves real risk, and you need to be protected.
- Local Presence: A provider with guards in your area can respond faster and more reliably than a company dispatching from across the state.
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Fire Watch for Construction Sites: Special Considerations
Construction sites have unique fire watch challenges that differ from occupied buildings:
Hot work permits: Most general contractors require a hot work permit system. The permit should specify the fire watch requirements, the designated fire watch person, and the cool-down monitoring period. OSHA requires that fire watch continue for at least 30 minutes after hot work ceases, but many project specifications require 60 minutes or more.
Multi-level buildings: On large construction projects, fire watch may need to cover the floor where hot work is being performed, the floor above, and the floor below. Combustible materials, debris, and open penetrations between floors create pathways for fire to spread.
Temporary heating: Salamander heaters, propane heaters, and other temporary heating devices used on construction sites during winter months can trigger fire watch requirements, especially in enclosed spaces or near combustible materials.
Night and weekend coverage: Construction sites are particularly vulnerable during off-hours when no workers are present. If fire protection systems are not yet operational, continuous fire watch may be required around the clock, including weekends and holidays.
What Happens If You Do Not Comply?
The consequences of failing to maintain required fire watch are serious:
- Stop-work orders: The fire marshal can halt all construction activity until fire watch is established and maintained.
- Daily fines: Jurisdictions can impose fines for each day of non-compliance. These add up quickly.
- Insurance complications: If a fire occurs and you did not have required fire watch in place, your insurance company may deny the claim. This alone can be financially devastating.
- Criminal liability: In cases where fire results in injury or death and required fire watch was not maintained, individuals can face criminal charges including negligence.
- Project delays: Beyond fines, the disruption to construction schedules, tenant move-in dates, and business operations creates cascading costs that far exceed the price of fire watch services.
Frequently Asked Questions
How quickly can fire watch be deployed?
A prepared security provider can typically have a trained fire watch guard on-site within 2 to 4 hours of receiving a request. For planned maintenance or construction projects, scheduling fire watch in advance ensures seamless coverage.
Can my own employees serve as fire watch?
Technically, yes, if they meet all the training and equipment requirements and are exclusively dedicated to fire watch duties during their assignment. However, most fire marshals prefer third-party professional fire watch personnel because they are less likely to be pulled away for other tasks and maintain more consistent documentation.
How long does fire watch typically last?
Duration varies widely. A hot work fire watch may last only a few hours. A fire watch for an impaired sprinkler system could last days or weeks until parts arrive and repairs are completed. Construction site fire watch may be required for months on large projects.
Do I need fire watch if my building has a fire alarm but no sprinklers?
It depends on your building's fire code requirements. If your building is required to have sprinklers and does not, the fire marshal can order fire watch. If your building is grandfathered and not required to have sprinklers, fire watch is generally not required unless another triggering condition exists.
Aetos Security provides 24/7 fire watch services across California and Washington.
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