⚠ Fire Safety · the UK

Grab the wrong extinguisher and you could make it worse

Five types, colour-coded for a reason. Knowing which is which can save a building.

Fire Safety Guide

Not all fires are the same, and neither are extinguishers. Use water on an electrical fire and you risk electrocution; use it on burning oil and you spread it. This guide explains the five extinguisher types, the classes of fire they're for, and the PASS technique for using one safely.

Why the right extinguisher matters

Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, the responsible person must provide appropriate fire-fighting equipment and ensure staff are trained. In practice that means being able to:
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P-A-S-S technique
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Water, foam, CO₂, powder, wet chemical
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Only fight a fire if it's safe

The main extinguisher types

Each type suits different fires — the colour-coded label tells you which. Tap each to see what it tackles.

👆 Tap an extinguisher to explore
Water (red label)

Class A

For wood, paper, textiles and other solids. Never use on electrical fires or burning liquids.

The classes of fire

Fires are grouped by what's burning. Knowing the class tells you which extinguisher is safe to use.

Class A

Solids

Wood, paper, fabric and plastics — use water or foam.

Class B

Liquids

Petrol, oil, paint and spirits — use foam, CO₂ or powder, never water.

Electrical

Live equipment

Use CO₂ — it won't conduct or leave residue. Never use water.

💡 The rule that prevents disasters

Match the extinguisher to the fire — the wrong one can make it worse. Water on an electrical or oil fire is dangerous. If in doubt, get out.

How to use one: P-A-S-S

If the fire is small, contained and your exit is clear, use the PASS technique:

Pull

Pull the safety pin to break the tamper seal.

Aim

Aim the nozzle at the base of the fire, not the flames.

Squeeze

Squeeze the handle to release the extinguishing agent.

Sweep

Sweep side to side across the base until the fire is out — then watch for re-ignition.

What the law requires

Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, the responsible person must provide appropriate fire-fighting equipment and ensure staff are trained. In practice that means being able to:

  • Provide the right extinguishers for the risks present
  • Service and inspect extinguishers regularly
  • Train staff to use them and when not to
  • Keep clear access and signage to all units
Knowledge check

Would you grab the right one?

Fire extinguisher questions

How many extinguishers do we need? +
It depends on the size and risk of the premises — a fire risk assessment determines the type, number and location.
How often should they be serviced? +
Typically an annual service by a competent person, with quick visual checks monthly.
Should staff be trained to use them? +
Yes — staff should know how and, just as importantly, when not to tackle a fire.
Is the certificate recognised? +
Yes — accepted by employers across the UK.
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