Guide

Passive Fire Compliance NZ

Passive fire compliance is about more than just installing a product. It is about making sure fire-rated elements remain effective, traceable and maintainable over time.

This guide looks at what passive fire compliance involves in practice for building owners, contractors, facility managers and project teams in New Zealand.

Protect life safety

Passive fire systems help preserve compartmentation and support safer building performance in a fire.

Improve quality

Compliance depends on good workmanship, practical inspection and consistent documentation.

Keep useful records

A passive fire register and good photo records help future maintenance and auditing.

Support existing buildings

Older buildings often need remedial work and clearer passive fire records.

What passive fire compliance usually involves

In practical terms, passive fire compliance usually comes down to three things: suitable installation, clear documentation and ongoing maintenance.

Fire-rated walls, floors and service penetrations need to be installed or remediated properly, and the work needs to be recorded so others can verify and maintain it later.

Many compliance issues are not caused by the original design alone. They happen later through service changes, damaged fire stopping, missing records or incomplete remedial work.

What helps most

  • Consistent installation quality
  • Clear location-based records
  • Photos before and after
  • Simple, usable penetration schedules
  • Remedial work completed properly
  • Ongoing review after service changes

Common passive fire compliance problems

Missing or incomplete fire stopping

Service penetrations may be left open or only partly treated.

Records do not match the building

Plans, schedules or handover information may be incomplete or outdated.

Changes after occupancy

Later trades often disturb passive fire work during maintenance or upgrades.

No simple register

Without a practical register, future tracking becomes much harder.

Inconsistent workmanship

Different installers or trades may leave varying outcomes across the same site.

Remedial scope not closed out

Defects may be identified but not fully completed and documented.

Practical documentation for compliance

Documentation should be practical, not overly complicated. The aim is to help building owners and future contractors understand what has been installed and where.

Good documentation also helps when buildings are modified later, because it gives a clearer starting point for inspection and remedial work.

A good passive fire register should be useful in the real world, not just a formality at handover.

Typical compliance records

  • Marked-up plans or location references
  • Photo records
  • Penetration schedules
  • System and product references
  • Installer and inspection records
  • Remedial close-out information

Frequently asked questions

What does passive fire compliance mean?

Passive fire compliance generally means the fire-rated construction and associated fire stopping work have been installed, maintained and documented properly.

Why do passive fire compliance issues happen?

They often happen because services are added later, penetrations are not reinstated properly, or records are incomplete or missing.

Do existing buildings need passive fire remediation?

Many existing buildings do require remedial work where fire separations have been altered, damaged or left undocumented over time.

What helps with passive fire compliance?

Quality installation, practical inspections, good documentation, photo records and keeping a usable passive fire register all help.

Need help with passive fire compliance?

Talk to BPFI about remediation, documentation and practical passive fire support.