The Government has published a document listing amendments to Volumes 1 and 2 of Approved Document B which will come into effect in September 2026.
These amendments principally concern:
- Threshold for the provision of a second staircase in blocks of flats with a storey 18m or more in height.
- Evacuation shafts are introduced to support the provision of evacuation lifts.
- Changes to provisions for fire doorsets.
- New terminology including definitions for evacuation shaft, evacuation lift lobby, interlocked stair and storey exit.
- Provisions for horizontal escape and vertical escape separated as per the structure of Volume 2.
The 2019 edition incorporating the 2020 and 2022 amendments will continue to apply where a building notice or an initial notice has been given to, or a building control approval application with full plans made to, the relevant authority before 30 September 2026 and either the building work to which it relates:
- has started and is sufficiently progressed before that day; or
- is started and is sufficiently progressed within the period of 18 months beginning on that day
You can view the amendments at the link below:
Fire safety: Approved Document B
FIS will publish further detailed guidance on these changes in the coming months.
See more news likes this
Workmanship on construction sites – Design and installation of dry lining systems.
The code of practice detailing design and installation of dry lining systems on construction sites has been reviewed. The Guide which was last reviewed in 1994 has been updated by a panel of experts and includes definitions on systems and terms and guidance for...
Updated Guide to the Building Safety Act
During last month's Building Safety Regulator Conference a number of queries were raised which are summarised below. Confirmation that hospitals and care homes are not required to be registered with the Building Safety Regulator before occupation unless they contain...
Switching from BS476 Fire Testing – An Open Webinar by CPA
The government has consulted on a potential move from the BS 476 fire testing standard to the Europen standard EN 13501-1. This, without a doubt, will affect many stakeholders in the built environment. BS 476 is well known across the industry and while some elements...



