Residential Fire Safety & Smoke Alarm Services

Three out of five home fire deaths happen in homes without working smoke alarms. Modern codes call for smoke alarms in every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level — interconnected so they all sound together — plus carbon monoxide alarms near sleeping areas in homes with fuel-burning appliances or attached garages. Our directory includes professionals who install and service residential alarm and sprinkler systems and perform whole-home fire safety inspections.

Newer homes in many jurisdictions also include residential fire sprinklers (NFPA 13D systems), which need occasional professional attention. And landlords in most states carry legal responsibility for working alarms in rental units — a service visit that documents compliance is cheap protection.

What these contractors handle

Code-required service schedule

FrequencyWhat's required
MonthlyTest every smoke and CO alarm with the test button
YearlyReplace batteries (unless 10-year sealed units); review escape plan
Every 10 yearsReplace smoke alarms entirely; CO alarms every 5–10 years per manufacturer

Schedules summarize national NFPA standards; your local fire code and AHJ requirements control. Verify specifics with a licensed local contractor.

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Frequently Asked Questions

In every bedroom, outside each sleeping area, and on every level including the basement — interconnected where possible so when one sounds, they all do. Avoid placement within 10 feet of cooking appliances to cut nuisance alarms.

Every 10 years from the manufacture date printed on the back — not just when batteries die. CO alarms typically last 5–10 years depending on the model.

Battery units are DIY-friendly, but hardwired interconnected systems, smart/monitored alarms, and rental-compliance documentation are jobs for a licensed electrician or alarm professional — exactly who you'll find in our directory.

Some states and many local jurisdictions require NFPA 13D sprinklers in new single-family construction. If your home has them, they need periodic professional inspection — and never paint over or hang anything from a sprinkler head.

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