Monday, January 5, 2026

California OSFM Clarifies Emergency Power Requirement for Smoke Alarms with Integral Strobes

 

California OSFM Clarifies Emergency Power Requirement for 120V Smoke Alarms with Integral Strobes (R-1 & R-2 Only)

Overview

The California Office of the State Fire Marshal (OSFM) has issued Code Interpretation 25-12, providing critical clarification on power supply requirements for 120-volt smoke alarms with integral strobe lights under the 2022 California Fire Code (CFC).

This interpretation has immediate design and construction implications for new residential projects, particularly Group R-1 and R-2 occupancies, and resolves long-standing confusion about whether internal battery backup alone is acceptable.

Spoiler alert: it is not.


What Triggered This Clarification?

Designers, contractors, and AHJs have questioned whether smoke alarms that include integral visual notification (strobes) could rely solely on internal battery backup during a power outage.

The OSFM was formally asked to interpret CFC Section 907.2.11.6, and the response was unambiguous.


Official OSFM Interpretation (Code Interpretation 25-12)

According to the OSFM:

Smoke alarms with integral strobes must be connected to an emergency electrical system when the strobe portion cannot be powered by the internal battery.

The Office further clarified that:

  • There are currently no listed smoke alarms where the battery backup is capable of powering the strobe

  • Strobes have significantly higher power demands than audible-only smoke alarms

  • Battery backup is therefore insufficient for visual notification appliances

This requirement is clearly stated in OSFM Code Interpretation 25-12, issued December 26, 2025


Diagram showing a 120V smoke alarm with integral strobe connected to a building emergency power circuit as required by California OSFM for R-1 and R-2 occupancies
California OSFM Code Interpretation 25-12 requires smoke alarms with integral strobes in Group R-1 and R-2 occupancies to be powered by an emergency electrical system.



Which Occupancies Are Affected?

This requirement applies only to the following occupancy groups:

 Applies To:

  • Group R-1

    • Hotels

    • Motels

    • Boarding houses

  • Group R-2

    • Apartments

    • Condominiums

    • Dormitories

    • Assisted living (non-R-3.1)

Does NOT Apply To:

  • Group R-3 (single-family dwellings)

  • Commercial occupancies

  • Audible-only smoke alarms

  • Smoke alarms without integral strobes

Clarity here matters. This is not a blanket requirement across all residential buildings.


What “Emergency Power” Means in Practice

For applicable R-1 and R-2 projects:

  • The strobe portion of the smoke alarm must be supplied by emergency power

  • Acceptable sources include:

    • Legally required standby power systems

    • Emergency generators

    • Other code-compliant emergency electrical systems

  • Simply installing a 120VAC smoke alarm with battery backup is not compliant when a strobe is integrated

This has direct impact on:

  • Electrical design

  • Circuiting strategy

  • Panel schedules

  • Cost estimating

  • AHJ plan review approvals


Why the OSFM Took This Position

The OSFM explicitly stated that:

  • Battery technology cannot reliably support strobe operation

  • Visual notification is a life-safety feature, especially for the hearing-impaired

  • Emergency power ensures continuous visual alerting during outages

This interpretation reinforces accessibility and survivability objectives already embedded in the California Fire Code.


Key Takeaways for Designers & Contractors

  •  Treat smoke alarms with integral strobes like notification appliances, not basic household   alarms

  •  Plan emergency power early in design for R-1 and R-2 projects

  •  Expect AHJs to enforce this interpretation statewide

  •  Do not assume battery backup satisfies strobe power requirements

Failing to account for this can result in plan check corrections, failed inspections, or costly redesigns.


Reference Document

  • CAL FIRE – Office of the State Fire Marshal

  • Code Interpretation 25-12

  • Issued December 26, 2025

  • 2022 California Fire Code – Section 907.2.11.6 

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