Menu

Hot Work Permits: Controlling the Fires You Light on Purpose

Hot work permits explained: when welding, cutting, and grinding need a permit, the fire watch, worked example of a permit walkthrough, and program pitfalls.

A hot work permit is the formal authorization required before welding, cutting, grinding, brazing, or any other spark- or flame-producing work happens outside a designated hot work area. Hot work remains one of the leading causes of industrial fires, and almost every one of those fires shares a signature: the job was routine, the combustibles were closer than anyone checked, and the fire started after the work ended.

When a permit is required

The rule of thumb: any spark-producing or open-flame work outside a purpose-built workshop zone needs a permit. That includes maintenance welding on a production line, torch-cutting a seized bolt in a rack aisle, and grinding near dust extraction. The permit is a specialized extension of the general permit to work system: same authorization logic, plus fire-specific controls.

What the permit actually controls

  • The 11-meter rule: combustibles moved or shielded within a radius around the work, commonly 35 feet (about 11 meters), including what is below: sparks fall through gratings.
  • Atmosphere: gas testing where flammable vapors are conceivable, and continuous monitoring where they are credible.
  • Systems status: sprinklers confirmed in service; smoke detection isolated only with compensating measures and restoration logged.
  • The fire watch: a person with extinguishing equipment during the work and for a defined period after it, typically at least 30 to 60 minutes, because smoldering ignition is the classic delayed killer.
  • Time limits: permits expire; conditions are re-verified per shift.

A worked example: one seized bearing housing

A fitter needs to torch-cut a seized bearing housing on a conveyor over a bark-dust basement. Permit walkthrough: combustibles within 11 meters, bark dust below the grating, so the floor is wetted, a fire blanket laid, and the basement checked; extinguishers staged; a fire watch assigned for the 40-minute job plus 60 minutes after; sprinkler status verified in service; adjacent LOTO applied to the conveyor. Total preparation: about 35 minutes. The alternative timeline is well documented in loss statistics: the smolder that becomes a basement fire two hours after the fitter packed up.

Why hot work programs decay

  • Repetition breeds shortcuts: the fifth permit this week gets the same combustible check as the first only if someone verifies it.
  • The fire watch leaves with the welder, the post-work watch is the least glamorous and most load-bearing control.
  • Contractors bring their own habits; the permit must bind them to site rules, not their default ones.
  • Designated hot work areas quietly accumulate combustibles until the designation is fiction.

Where Fabrico fits

Fabrico carries the discipline that makes permits real: hot work checklists attached to the work order type so they open with the job, fire watch assignments and post-work confirmation captured as steps with timestamps, permit expiry visible on the job, and the full record living on the asset history when the insurer or investigator asks. Fabrico does not replace the permit authority or the fire watch; it makes skipping them visible. EU-built, with EU data residency.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does grinding really need a hot work permit?

Outside designated areas, generally yes: grinding throws hot sparks capable of igniting dust, fibers, and vapors. Many serious hot work fires began with "just a quick grind," which is precisely the job the permit is designed to slow down for five minutes of checking.

How long must the fire watch stay after work ends?

Common requirements are at least 30 minutes, extended to 60 or more where smoldering risk is higher, with some standards adding a later re-inspection of the area. Follow the stricter of your jurisdiction, insurer, and site rules, and write the time into the permit.

Can hot work be avoided entirely?

Often, and that is the best control: mechanical cutting, hydraulic nut splitters, cold-joining methods, or moving the workpiece to the workshop. The permit form should ask "can this be done cold?" before anything else, which is the hierarchy of controls doing its job.

Want hot work permits, fire watch steps, and evidence attached to every job? Book a Fabrico demo to see safety-critical procedures run through a field-ready CMMS.

Latest from our blog

Define Your Reliability Roadmap
Validate Your Potential ROI: Book a Live Demo
Define Your Reliability Roadmap
By clicking the Accept button, you are giving your consent to the use of cookies when accessing this website and utilizing our services. To learn more about how cookies are used and managed, please refer to our Privacy Policy and Cookies Declaration