Unfortunately, not all providers approach inspections the same way. Some do the job thoroughly. Others rush, skip steps, or treat maintenance as a quick box-check.
So how can you tell the difference?
This guide walks through what compliant servicing of fire equipment should include, the most common ways providers cut corners, and how Fire Equipment Inc. (FEI) helps businesses across New England stay inspection-ready year-round.
Most compliance problems don’t come from people ignoring fire safety. They come from assuming a provider is doing everything correctly when they’re not.
If servicing of fire protection is incomplete, you may face:
- failed inspections and re-inspection feesEven worse: a low-quality inspection can make you think you’re compliant when you’re not.
Proper fire protection service includes inspection, testing, maintenance, and documentation of all required fire systems and fire protection equipment.
A thorough, code-aligned fire protection service visit is more than a walk-through. It’s a mix of inspection, testing, maintenance, and documentation tailored to your building.
At minimum, a provider should:
1. Review your prior history first
Before touching equipment, they should check:
- last inspection dates
- previous deficiencies
- recurring issues
- outstanding repairs
This is how they ensure compliance gaps don’t repeat.
2. Inspect every required component
For each system, they should verify:
- condition
- placement
- accessibility
- functionality
- expiration dates / recalls
Skipping even one device category can create a compliance hole.
3. Perform required functional testing
Not just visual checks. True fire protection testing includes:
- alarm device testing
- sprinkler valve checks & flow verification
- extinguisher pressure/weight verification
- suppression system actuation checks (where required)
These tests are what NFPA standards and AHJs are evaluating.
4. Identify deficiencies clearly
A good report includes:
- what failed
- where it is
- why it matters
- how urgent it is
- what fix is recommended
“No issues” with no supporting detail is a warning sign.
5. Provide tags and documentation onsite
You should walk away with:
Here’s what we see most often in New England facilities when providers aren’t doing things the right way:
Red Flag #1: “Drive-by” inspections
If an inspection that should take an hour takes 10 minutes, something wasn’t checked. Thorough inspections require time on:
- device countsRed Flag #2: They only inspect what’s easy to reach
Providers sometimes skip:
- devices above ceilings
- valves in locked rooms
- backflows/fire pumps
- extinguishers in less used parts of the building
AHJs don’t accept “we didn’t have access” as a long-term excuse.
Red Flag #3: Vague reporting
Watch out for reports that say:
- “pass” with no notes
- no serial numbers
- no device locations
- no deficiency detail
In an audit, vague reports don’t protect you.
Red Flag #4: Deficiencies never get closed
Some vendors are great at identifying issues… and terrible at fixing them.
If your deficiency list grows year after year, you’re not getting full maintenance of fire equipment — just recurring paperwork.
Red Flag #5: They recommend replacements without proof
“Replace the whole thing” shouldn’t be the default.
A quality provider should explain:
- what wasn’t compliant
- what failed in testing
- what code requires
- why repair isn’t sufficient
No explanation = no trust.
Red Flag #6: They don’t manage your inspection calendar
If your provider isn’t helping track:
- monthly/quarterly/annual intervalsAsk yourself:
- Do I know what was tested — not just “inspected”?
- Are tags and service reports always current?
- Do reports include details I could show a fire marshal?
- Are deficiencies explained clearly with next steps?
- Does my provider help plan the year’s inspections?
- Can they handle all systems, or do I juggle multiple fire inspection companies?
- Can I easily reach a knowledgeable local representative, or am I routed through a call center or answering service?
- How long am I typically waiting for service, follow-up, or issue resolution?
- Is my provider a full-service fire protection company, or am I coordinating multiple fire equipment services myself?
If any of those feel shaky, it’s worth a deeper review.
Fire Equipment Inc. (FEI) is a full-service fire protection company serving New England, providing inspection, testing, maintenance, and documentation for all major fire protection systems.
Fire Equipment Inc. (FEI) is built around the principle: compliance shouldn’t be guesswork.
Here’s how our process prevents cut-corner risk:
Multi-system inspections under one accountable team
We service all major fire protection systems, so no part of your building is left out or pushed to another vendor.
Standards-based testing
Our inspections follow NFPA requirements with transparent, documented fire protection testing — so you know exactly what was checked and why.
Deficiency-to-resolution support
When something isn’t compliant, we don’t just flag it. We help you fix it quickly and keep a record trail that AHJs accept and other accreditations.
Annual maintenance planning
We help facilities map out inspection requirements into a working calendar — so servicing of fire equipment is proactive, not reactive.
Clear documentation
Our reports are designed to be audit-ready, with serials, locations, deficiencies, and service history outlined clearly.
A provider who cuts corners doesn’t just put you at compliance risk — they put your people, property, and operations at risk too.
The good news is you don’t need to be a fire code expert to spot the difference. You just need to know what proper maintenance of fire protection looks like — and what red flags to avoid.
If you’re unsure about your current provider’s level of service, Fire Equipment Inc. (FEI) can review your reports, identify gaps, and build a complete compliance path for your facility.
Want a second set of eyes on your last inspection report?
Fire Equipment Inc. (FEI) can audit your recent fire protection service records and confirm whether you’re inspection-ready.