Operational Safety Requirements

The IFC and most local fire codes impose operational requirements on recreational fires and fire features that apply every time the fire is in use — not just at initial construction. These rules apply whether or not a permit was required for the feature itself.

Constant Adult Attendance

IFC Section 307.4 requires that recreational fires be constantly attended by a competent adult until the fire is extinguished. This rule is almost universally adopted in local codes. "Constantly attended" means someone is present at the fire location and focused on it — not inside the house checking on it intermittently.

Leaving a fire unattended, even briefly, is the most commonly cited fire violation when neighbors call code enforcement. It's also the most common factor in residential fire spread from backyard fire pits — an unattended fire during a wind shift is the typical origin story.

Extinguishing Equipment

The IFC requires that extinguishing equipment be immediately available at every recreational fire. Specifically: a garden hose connected to a water supply, or a bucket of water or sand of sufficient size, or an approved portable fire extinguisher. In practice, a garden hose within reach is the standard. A 5-gallon bucket of sand also satisfies the requirement.

Some local codes add specific requirements — a fire extinguisher rated at minimum 2A:10BC, for example. Check your local code if you're uncertain. The practical advice: have a garden hose you can pick up and point at the fire immediately, and keep it connected and pressurized whenever the fire is burning.

Prohibited Burning Materials

IFC Section 307.1 prohibits burning "rubbish" in recreational fires. Local codes typically expand this list substantially. Universally prohibited materials in virtually all jurisdictions:

  • Household garbage, trash, and food waste
  • Plastics, rubber, and synthetic materials
  • Treated lumber, painted wood, or railroad ties (produce toxic emissions)
  • Plywood and particleboard (contain chemical adhesives)
  • Wet or green wood (excessive smoke; also inefficient)
  • Accelerants added to established fires
  • Leaves, yard waste, and agricultural debris (in most incorporated areas — these typically require a separate burn permit if allowed at all)

The practical and legal fuel for a residential fire pit: dry, seasoned hardwood or approved manufactured fire logs. Nothing else.

Spark Arrestors

For masonry chimneys and flues on outdoor fireplaces and pizza ovens, most jurisdictions require a UL-listed spark arrestor — a mesh cap on top of the chimney that prevents burning embers from being carried out of the flue by draft. Key requirements:

  • UL-listed (look for the UL mark on the cap)
  • Wire mesh size: maximum ½-inch opening in most codes (some require ¼ or ⅜ inch in high fire risk areas)
  • Must be maintained — replace if mesh is damaged, corroded, or blocked with creosote

Spark arrestors are also required or strongly recommended on chimney caps for wood-burning fire features in all Western states and other high fire risk areas. A spark arrestor is one of the most important fire safety features on a wood-burning outdoor fireplace.

Wind and Weather Prohibitions

The IFC and most local codes prohibit recreational fires during high wind conditions. What constitutes "high wind" varies — the IFC gives authority to the fire chief to prohibit burning based on local conditions. Common thresholds:

  • Sustained winds above 15 mph: many jurisdictions automatically prohibit all outdoor fires
  • Red Flag Weather Warnings: virtually all western jurisdictions prohibit all outdoor burning during NOAA Red Flag Warnings
  • Low relative humidity combined with wind: some fire districts set combined thresholds

Checking weather before lighting is both legally and practically essential. Wind-shifted sparks from fire pits are a significant cause of residential structure fires and wildland-urban interface ignitions.

Fire Size Limits

The IFC recreational fire definition limits fuel area to 3 feet in diameter and 2 feet in height. This is the maximum size for a recreational fire — exceeding it crosses into a different regulatory category. In practice, this means:

  • Large bonfires — wood stacked over 3 feet in diameter — are not recreational fires under the IFC and are typically prohibited in residential areas without special event permits
  • The 3-foot/2-foot limit refers to fuel area, not the pit diameter — you can have a 4-foot wide stone ring as long as the burning fuel mass stays within the 3-foot/2-foot envelope

Gas Fire Feature Safety Codes

Gas fire features have a distinct set of safety requirements primarily addressed through the gas line installation inspection and manufacturer clearance compliance:

  • Auto-shutoff valve: Manual shutoff valve required within 6 feet of the appliance for easy emergency shutdown
  • Pressure regulator: Required on LP/propane systems; size must match BTU demand
  • Flexible connector length: Maximum flex connector length from rigid pipe to appliance (varies by code — typically 36–72 inches)
  • Clearance from LP tank: Most codes require 3–10 feet from propane tank to open flame
  • Listed appliance: Gas fire features should bear a CSA, AGA, or UL listing mark confirming they were tested and approved for residential use
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If you believe a neighbor's fire is violating local fire codes — no adult in attendance, fire during high wind, burning prohibited materials — contact your local fire department's non-emergency line. Fire code violations are enforced by the fire marshal's office, not building code enforcement. Most fire departments respond to these calls quickly when a fire hazard is actively present. For non-emergency concerns (repeated pattern of violations), a written complaint to the fire marshal's office creates a formal record.
Yes. Gas appliance codes require a manual shutoff valve accessible within a short distance of the appliance. For propane fire tables using a tank, the tank valve serves this purpose — but the tank should be accessible and the valve should be easy to reach and operate. For naturally-piped gas fire features, a dedicated manual shutoff valve within 6 feet of the appliance is typically required and is installed as part of the gas line rough-in.
For portable fire pits, a damaged spark screen is a safety hazard but isn't typically a code enforcement violation on its own unless the pit is in use and sparks are escaping. For masonry chimney spark arrestors, a damaged or missing arrestor is a building code violation that could affect a future home sale or insurance claim. Replace damaged spark screens and chimney arrestors promptly — they're inexpensive and the replacement prevents the most likely fire spread scenario from your fire feature.
Disclaimer: For general informational purposes only. Always verify with your local building department and relevant authorities before constructing or operating any fire feature. Not legal advice.