Kitchen Hood Fire Suppression Systems
Commercial kitchens are the highest fire-risk occupancy most cities have, and codes treat them that way: NFPA 96 requires the wet-chemical suppression system protecting your hood, ducts, and cooking appliances to be inspected and serviced every six months by a qualified company. Our directory connects restaurants, cafeterias, and commissaries with licensed hood suppression contractors.
Semiannual service isn't optional — an out-of-date system tag can shut down your kitchen during a health or fire inspection, void your insurance in a fire, and put your staff at risk. Modern systems must also meet the UL 300 standard; if your kitchen still runs an older dry-chemical system, insurers and AHJs increasingly require an upgrade.
What these contractors handle
- Semiannual NFPA 96 inspection and service of wet-chemical systems
- Fusible link replacement and nozzle cap/blow-off checks
- UL 300 system upgrades and new system installation
- Coordination of appliance coverage after kitchen line changes
- Class K extinguisher service on the same visit
- Service tags and reports for the fire marshal, health inspector, and insurer
Code-required service schedule
Schedules summarize national NFPA standards; your local fire code and AHJ requirements control. Verify specifics with a licensed local contractor.
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