The knowledge qualification for fire door installers
The NFAQ Award in Fire Door Installation provides the structured knowledge base required to install fire-resisting door assemblies correctly, compliantly, and in a way that preserves the full performance of the tested assembly. A fire door is only as good as its installation — an incorrectly fitted doorset, regardless of how well it was manufactured, may fail to perform its rated function when lives depend on it.
This qualification is built around the current technical and regulatory framework that governs fire door installation in England and Wales — including Approved Document B, BS 8214:2016, BS EN 1634-1:2014, the scope of test, and Extended Field of Application (EFoA) rules. It covers the full installation sequence, from pre-installation planning and structural opening preparation through to hardware specification, threshold detailing, seal installation, and the documentation required to hand over to the Responsible Person under Regulation 38 of the Building Regulations.
The course is fully online and self-paced, with six months' access from enrolment. Assessment is in two parts: a 30-question multiple choice paper and a written scenario. Pass both and your NFAQ digital certificate is issued within three working days.
Learning outcomes
By the end of this course you will be able to:
Identify the legal and regulatory requirements that govern fire door installation in England and Wales
Interpret the scope of test and apply Extended Field of Application rules to installation decisions
Read and apply manufacturer data sheets, installation instructions and technical specifications
Prepare structural openings and install door frames to achieve correct gap tolerances
Specify and fit seals, intumescent products, hinges and self-closing devices within the tested specification
Install fire-rated glazing, ironmongery and penetrations within the scope of the assembly test
Complete post-installation checks and verify that gap tolerances meet the required standard
Produce compliant installation records and Regulation 38 handover documentation
Eight modules — 8 to 10 hours of learning
Each module ends with a knowledge check. Work through the modules at your own pace and revisit content at any time within your six-month access window.
1 Fire Safety and the Installer's Responsibility Understand the fire safety context in which installers operate and the specific legal duties that apply to those who install fire-resisting door assemblies.
- How fire develops and why compartmentation matters
- The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 and the installer's duty of care
- Building Regulations 2010 and Approved Document B — what installers must comply with
- The Fire Safety Act 2021 and Building Safety Act 2022 competence expectations
- Regulation 38 — the handover obligation
- Consequences of non-compliant installation — legal, professional and life-safety
2 Standards, Testing and Certification Understand the testing and certification standards that govern fire door assemblies and how to verify that a product you are installing meets the required performance.
- BS 476-22:1987 and BS EN 1634-1:2014 — what each covers and when each applies
- How fire door assemblies are furnace-tested and what the test evidence covers
- Third-party certification schemes — BWF-Certifire, BM TRADA Q-Mark and others
- CE marking and UKCA marking — Declarations of Performance
- Reading and verifying door leaf labels before and during installation
- FD30, FD60, FDS ratings — what each requires of the installer
3 Scope of Test and Extended Field of Application The most technically demanding module — this is the knowledge that separates a compliant installation from one that silently voids the product's certification.
- What the scope of test specifies and why every element matters
- Extended Field of Application (EFoA) — what variations are permitted
- What falls outside EFoA: core material changes, leaf size limits, untested hardware
- Reading manufacturer data sheets to confirm installation compliance
- Common installation decisions that inadvertently void certification
- When to refer back to the manufacturer before proceeding
4 Structural Opening Preparation and Frame Installation The frame installation sets the foundation for everything that follows — incorrect opening preparation or frame fitting makes correct gap tolerances impossible to achieve.
- Assessing the structural opening — size, squareness and condition
- Frame specification — compatible frame types for the tested assembly
- Frame fixing methods and requirements under BS 8214:2016
- Packing and shimming — maintaining squareness and plumb
- Fire-stopping the perimeter gap between frame and structure
- Rebate depth and the relationship between rebate and leaf-to-frame gap
- Common frame installation defects and how to avoid them
5 Seals, Strips and Threshold Detailing Seals and strips are critical performance components — using the wrong product or installing it incorrectly can reduce fire resistance duration or eliminate smoke control entirely.
- Intumescent strips — product types, groove specifications and installation method
- Smoke seals — brush, compression and combined intumescent/smoke products
- Confirming seal specification matches the manufacturer's test evidence
- Threshold seals and drop seals — installation and floor clearance requirements
- Glazing bead seals and perimeter glazing seals
- Common seal installation failures and their consequences
6 Hardware Specification and Installation Hardware installation is the area where certification is most frequently voided through substitution of untested components. Every fitting decision must be traceable back to the manufacturer's specification.
- Hinges — minimum quantity, fire rating (EN 1935), weight matching and fixing requirements
- Self-closing devices — EN power classification, installation position and adjustment
- Hold-open devices — electromagnetic releases and fail-safe requirements
- Locks and latches — specification within scope of test
- Fire-rated glazing — size limits, glass type, bead and fixing specification
- Letter plates, cat flaps and other penetrations — what is and is not permissible
- Ironmongery substitution — why 'equivalent' is not good enough without evidence
7 Post-Installation Checks and Gap Tolerances Every installation must be verified before handover. A door that looks correct may have gap tolerances that are outside the tested specification — only measurement confirms compliance.
- Gap tolerances — head, stiles and threshold (3mm standard)
- Using calibrated gap gauges — technique and recording method
- Checking door operation — smooth swing, self-close and latch engagement
- Verifying self-closing device function at 30°, 60° and 90°
- Identifying and resolving installation defects before handover
- Signage requirements — Keep Shut and Keep Locked Shut
8 Documentation, Handover and Regulation 38 Correct documentation protects both the installer and the building owner, and is a legal requirement under Building Regulations. A compliant installation without compliant records is not a compliant job.
- Regulation 38 — the legal obligation to provide fire safety information on completion
- What installation records must contain for each doorset installed
- Collating and passing on certification evidence, test certificates and data sheets
- As-installed fire door schedules — format and required content
- Photographic records — what to capture and how to file
- Your ongoing liability and the importance of retained records
Who should take this course?
This qualification is designed for tradespeople and professionals who install fire-resisting door assemblies as part of their work, or who want to add compliant fire door installation to their competence portfolio.
Joiners and carpenters
Tradespeople who fit fire doors in new builds, refurbishment and social housing projects.
Building contractors
Main contractors and subcontractors responsible for fire door installation on commercial projects.
Social housing maintenance
In-house trades fitting replacement fire doors across residential portfolios.
Specialist fire door contractors
Companies whose primary offering includes supply and installation of fire-resisting doorsets.
Site managers and surveyors
Those overseeing fire door installation works who need to understand compliance requirements.
Facilities teams
Building managers and facilities staff overseeing or procuring fire door installation works.
Assessment — two components
Assessment is completed entirely online. Both parts must be passed to achieve the award. Part A results are instant; Part B is marked by a qualified NFAQ assessor within five working days.
Part A — Multiple choice
Part B — Written scenario
Up to three resit attempts per component within the six-month enrolment period. A 24-hour cooling-off period applies between attempts.
NFAQ digital certificate
NFAQ Award in Fire Door Installation (NFAQ-FDIN-L3)
On passing both assessment components, your NFAQ digital certificate is issued within three working days. Each certificate includes a unique reference number verifiable instantly at nfaq.co.uk/verify — providing employers, main contractors and building control bodies with confidence in your installation competence.
Frequently asked questions
Does this course qualify me to install fire doors?
Do I need any prior experience or qualifications?
How is this different from the Fire Door Inspection course?
How long do I have to complete the course?
What if I fail the assessment?
Can I buy the course for multiple members of my team?
Ready to get qualified?
Enrol today and start your NFAQ Award in Fire Door Installation. Six months' access, fully online, digital certificate on completion.
