Battery backup, UPS systems, and fuel cells used as primary emergency power are governed by NFPA 111 — a standard most facilities don't realize applies to them. If your documentation doesn't prove your system performed to standard, the AHJ will treat it as if it didn't.
NFPA 111 applies to facilities where stored electrical energy systems — batteries, UPS, or fuel cells — serve as the primary source of emergency power, rather than a generator. The standard requires documented battery capacity testing, transfer time verification, and environmental controls (ventilation) for battery installations. Many facilities covered by NFPA 111 don't realize they are — until a surveyor tells them.
NFPA 111 applies to facilities where stored electrical energy systems — batteries, UPS, or fuel cells — serve as the primary source of emergency power. The standard requires documented battery capacity testing, transfer time verification, and environmental controls (ventilation) for battery installations. Many facilities covered by NFPA 111 don't realize they are — until a surveyor tells them.
These aren't hypothetical — they're the findings that show up repeatedly in CMS, Joint Commission, and AHJ inspections.
We identify which standard applies to your emergency power systems and establish the documentation program to meet it.
Tell us about your facility and your current stored energy system setup. We'll review your NFPA 111 compliance posture and tell you exactly what a surveyor would find — before they show up.
We respond to every submission the same business day. If you have an upcoming survey or recent citation, note it in the form.
We'll review your details and reach out within one business day. If you have an urgent survey situation, call us directly.