Power failures can happen at any time. In a workplace or managed property, even a short outage can cause confusion, panic, or delay during evacuation. Emergency lighting provides a reliable backup, ensuring people can exit safely when mains power fails.
In the UK, emergency lighting is a legal requirement under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. Guidance is provided by BS 5266-1: Emergency Lighting – Code of Practice, which sets the standards for design, installation, and testing. These regulations state that:
Escape routes must remain illuminated during a power cut
Systems must activate automatically
Coverage should last for a minimum of three hours
All lighting must be regularly tested and maintained
Emergency lighting is not just about compliance. It plays a crucial role in protecting people and property by:
Supporting safe evacuation by guiding occupants to exits
Reducing panic in large or crowded spaces
Assisting emergency responders entering a building during a blackout
Minimising disruption in high-risk areas such as manufacturing lines or control rooms
Different environments call for different solutions:
Escape route lighting ensures corridors and stairways remain visible
Open area (anti-panic) lighting prevents panic in larger rooms and halls
High-risk task area lighting supports safe shutdown of dangerous processes
Standby lighting provides enough light for operations to continue if needed
Emergency lighting must be tested regularly to ensure it will work in a real emergency:
Monthly functional tests check that lights switch on correctly
Annual full-duration tests confirm batteries can power the lights for the required three hours
All results must be recorded in a fire safety logbook
Emergency lighting saves lives during power failures. It provides safe exit routes, reduces panic, and ensures businesses remain compliant with UK fire safety law. With professional installation and routine maintenance, businesses can trust their systems to perform when it matters most.