Fire Marshal Inspection Checklist: What They Actually Look For

Published: August 12, 2025 | Category: Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning

Fire marshals have zero tolerance for grease buildup in kitchen exhaust systems. One grease fire and a restaurant is done. Here's exactly what they inspect and how restaurants fail — which is your opportunity to help them pass.

Why Fire Marshals Care About Kitchen Exhaust

Grease fires in commercial kitchens cause millions in damage annually. Fire marshals know that dirty exhaust systems are ticking time bombs. They're not checking for "cleanliness" — they're preventing disasters.

Unlike health inspectors who focus on food safety, fire marshals care about one thing: will this place burn down?

NFPA 96 Standard: The Bible of Kitchen Exhaust

Fire marshals follow NFPA 96 (Standard for Ventilation Control and Fire Protection of Commercial Cooking Operations). This isn't suggestions — it's code.

Key NFPA 96 Requirements:

What Fire Marshals Inspect (In Order)

1. Cleaning Certificates

First thing they ask for: "Show me your exhaust cleaning certificates."

What they look for:

Instant failures:

2. Hood Interior Inspection

Fire marshals stick their heads inside exhaust hoods. They know what clean looks like.

Pass criteria:

Common violations:

3. Ductwork Access Points

They'll open access panels to check ductwork cleanliness. Most restaurants fail here.

What they check:

4. Fan and Roof Inspection

Rooftop exhaust fans are grease magnets. Fire marshals climb up there.

Critical checkpoints:

High-Risk Restaurant Types

Automatic Quarterly Cleaning Requirements:

Semi-Annual Cleaning (Still Risky):

Common Fire Marshal Violations

Documentation Failures (60% of violations):

Physical Violations (40% of violations):

The Business Opportunity

Every violation is a potential client. Fire marshals give restaurants deadlines to fix violations — usually 30-60 days.

How to Find Restaurants in Violation:

Positioning Your Service

Lead with Compliance, Not Cleaning:

Don't pitch "exhaust cleaning." Pitch "fire code compliance" and "inspection readiness."

Winning approach:

"We ensure your kitchen exhaust system passes fire marshal inspection. Our certified technicians follow NFPA 96 standards and provide the documentation fire marshals require."

Emphasize Certification:

Fire marshals only accept work from certified contractors. Make sure you have:

Pricing Based on Risk

High-risk restaurants pay premium prices because they have no choice. Price based on compliance urgency, not just square footage.

Premium Pricing Factors:

Cross-Selling Opportunities

Kitchen exhaust cleaning pairs perfectly with grease trap cleaning. Same customers, same compliance mindset, complementary services.

Restaurants that neglect exhaust cleaning often neglect grease traps too. Bundle services for higher contract values.

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