News

Service ready for new Residential PEEP regulations

Published 23 March 2026

An example of an evacuation plan attached to a clipboard

Cumbria Fire & Rescue Service is preparing for new national fire safety regulations that come into force on 6 April 2026 in England, designed to improve evacuation arrangements for residents who may need support to leave their building in the event of a fire.

The Fire Safety (Residential Evacuation Plans) (England) Regulations 2025 introduce a new process called Residential Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans (RPEEPs).

These apply to certain multi-occupied residential buildings in England and place new legal duties on Responsible Persons – usually building owners, landlords or managers.

Under the regulations, Responsible Persons will be required to use reasonable endeavours to identify residents who may have difficulty evacuating without assistance because of a physical or cognitive impairment, offer them a person-centred fire risk assessment, and – where the resident wishes – agree an emergency evacuation statement.

They must also develop and maintain a building wide emergency evacuation plan.

With the resident’s explicit consent, building owners will share a small amount of essential information with the fire and rescue service, including their flat number, floor number and a basic indication of the assistance they may need.

No medical or personal information will be shared.

Cumbria Fire & Rescue Service has now put in place the systems and processes needed to receive this information securely and to use it to support effective emergency response.

Jennie Schamp, Area Manager for Prevention and Protection at Cumbria Fire & Rescue Service, said:

These changes are an important step towards making sure everyone feels safe in their own home, especially those who might need extra support in an emergency.

They give much clearer expectations for building owners and managers, and we welcome that.

While the responsibility for putting these arrangements in place sits with the Responsible Person, we’re ready to receive the information they share with residents’ consent, and to use it to help us respond as effectively as possible if a fire does occur.

If any residents think they may benefit from these new arrangements, we’d encourage them to speak to their building owner or managing agent.

Our role is to use the limited information we’re given to support our crews on the ground and to continue working with our partners to help keep our communities safe.


Participation in the RPEEP process is voluntary, and residents can withdraw consent at any time.

Fire and rescue services are not responsible for conducting assessments, creating evacuation statements, or deciding on mitigation measures – these remain the responsibility of building owners and managers.

The new Regulations apply to residential buildings in England that are 18 metres or seven storeys or higher, or over 11 metres where a simultaneous evacuation strategy is in place.