June 1, 2026

NBCS 2026 vs NBC 2016 Part 4: What Changed in India’s Fire Safety Standards

Table of Contents
🔥 Quick Answer
NBCS 2026 Part F replaces NBC 2016 Part 4 as India’s fire safety reference standard. Key changes include: a raised high-rise threshold (24 m for residential), a new datacentre occupancy class (Group E-II), mandatory EV parking fire safety, metro station provisions, dramatically expanded compartmentation rules, and 14 new detection technologies. Crucially, NBCS 2026 is advisory — not a mandatory code. State adoption determines enforceability.

The Bureau of Indian Standards released the National Building Construction Standards (NBCS) 2026 in May 2026 — the first comprehensive revision of India’s fire safety building standard since NBC 2016. At 269 pages (vs approximately 120 in NBC 2016 Part 4), Part F covers fire prevention, life safety, and fire protection with substantially more depth, new occupancy types, and technology-specific guidance that reflects how buildings and fire risks have evolved over the last decade.

This article provides a structured comparison for fire safety engineers, facility managers, architects, and compliance professionals. We cover every major section where the two standards diverge.

⚠ Important Note on Legal Status

NBCS 2026 Part F explicitly states it is “only for guidance and referral for the state government/local authority.” Fire Services is a State subject under Article 243(w) of the Constitution. NBC 2016 was framed as a mandatory national code. This shift is significant — NBCS 2026 becomes enforceable only when a State Government adopts it through Building Bye-Laws or their Fire Services Act. Check your applicable State regulation before assuming compliance obligations.

1. Document Structure & Scope

NBC 2016 Part 4 was a single part within the larger National Building Code. NBCS 2026 Part F is similarly structured but stands at more than double the page count, primarily due to expanded tables, new annexures, and technology-specific guidance.

Aspect NBC 2016 Part 4 NBCS 2026 Part F
Volume ~120 pages 269 pages
Annexures A to H (8 total) A to N (14 total)
Legal status Mandatory code reference Advisory/guidance only
Definitions ~40 terms 70 terms (Cl. 2.1–2.70)
Occupancy groups 9 groups (A–J) 10 groups (A–K, adding Mixed Use)

Applicability Thresholds

NBC 2016 applied broadly based on a 15 m “high-rise” trigger for most occupancies. NBCS 2026 introduces a more nuanced table:

Occupancy NBC 2016 Height Trigger NBCS 2026 Height Trigger NBCS 2026 Area Trigger
Residential ≥15 m ≥24 m Changed 750 m²
Educational ≥15 m ≥9 m Changed 500 m²
Institutional ≥15 m ≥15 m ✓ 500 m²
Assembly ≥15 m ≥9 m Changed 750 m²
Business ≥15 m ≥15 m ✓ 750 m²
Mercantile ≥15 m ≥15 m ✓ 1,000 m²
Industrial G-1, G-2 Height + area Any height, total area >2,000 m² 2,000 m²

 

Two new applicability provisions are notable: self-certification is now allowed for buildings ≤500 m² and ≤24 m height by a State-approved professional; and Performance-Based Design (PBD) is formally scoped in Cl. 1.4 and Annex M, though restricted to heritage buildings and large special-purpose buildings with State authority approval.

NBCS 2026 vs NBC 2016 Fire Safety Standards comparison infographic showing key changes in high-rise building requirements, EV parking fire safety, datacentre protection, occupancy classifications, compartmentation rules, fire detection technologies, and fire suppression systems in India.

Key differences between NBCS 2026 Part F and NBC 2016 Part 4, including EV parking safety, datacentre fire protection, compartmentation, and updated fire safety requirements.

2. Occupancy Classification — What’s New

Group K: Mixed Use (New)

NBC 2016 treated mixed occupancy as a general provision. NBCS 2026 creates Group K as a formal occupancy class, with a detailed matrix specifying the fire resistance rating required between every pair of occupancies.

🔥 Key Rule: Minor Occupancy Threshold Raised

NBC 2016 allowed incidental occupancy up to 10% of floor area without reclassification. NBCS 2026 raises this to 30%. Only beyond 30% does the building get classified as mixed occupancy (Group K).

Group E-II: Datacentres (New)

This is one of the most significant additions. NBC 2016 lumped datacentres under general Business occupancy. NBCS 2026 creates a dedicated sub-classification E-II with its own occupant loads, travel distances, detection technology, and suppression requirements — reflecting the explosion of datacentre construction in India.

Hotels Split: A-IV and A-V

Hotels are now split into A-IV (up to 4-star) and A-V (5-star and above) with separate protection level requirements. Five-star hotels have higher baseline requirements including mandatory CL-5 protection up to 60 m height.

Mercantile: F-II Underground Shopping

Underground shopping centres are formally classified as Group F-II with specific requirements distinct from above-grade retail.

3. Life Safety — Exit and Egress Changes

Travel Distances (Table 4)

Travel distances with sprinklers have been extended for several occupancies:

Occupancy NBC 2016 Sprinklered NBCS 2026 Sprinklered Change
Residential (A) 45 m 60 m +15 m
Business (E) 45 m 60 m +15 m
Storage (H) 60 m 90 m +30 m
Datacentre (E-II) Not listed 60 m New
Educational, Institutional, Assembly, Mercantile 45 m 45 m No change
Industrial G-1/G-2 60 m 60 m No change

Key Exit Requirement Changes

NBC 2016
Exit ceiling height: 2.0 m
Residential riser max: 190 mm
Residential stair width (1-2 family): 0.90 m
Apartment stair width: 1.50 m
NBCS 2026
Exit ceiling height: 2.4 m
Residential riser max: 175 mm
Residential stair width (1-2 family): 1.00 m
Apartment stair width: 1.25 m

New Basement Rules (Cl. 4.2.19)

Basement safety provisions are significantly tightened. NBCS 2026 now explicitly prohibits the following uses in basements:

  • Sleeping purposes
  • Classrooms
  • Hazardous industry operations
  • Restaurant kitchens using LPG
  • Battery rooms and UPS rooms
  • Fuel oil storage

Additional basement requirements: minimum clear height raised to 3.4 m; minimum 2 independent exits mandatory in all cases; smoke ventilation systems and high-density sprinklers required.

4. Compartmentation — Major Overhaul

Compartmentation is the most dramatically expanded section in NBCS 2026. NBC 2016 provided basic guidance on fire barriers. NBCS 2026 introduces five formal barrier types and a detailed 13-row Table 6 with sprinklered and unsprinklered compartment sizes for every building category.

Five Formal Barrier Types (New)

Type Description
Type A Masonry construction with fire-rated door assembly
Type B New Fire-rated fabric dropdown curtain assembly (3 sub-types by integrity + radiation + insulation ratings)
Type C New Fire-rated glazed partition and door assembly (2 sub-types)
Type D New Gypsum board / cementitious board assembly
Type E New Masonry construction with fire-rated metal sliding door

Compartment Size Table (Selected, Table 6)

Building Type Without Sprinkler With Sprinkler
Enclosed basement car parking 750 m² 5,000 m²
Hospitals / nursing homes 750 m² 2,000 m²
Custodial (aged / children) 750 m² 1,500 m²
Business buildings 750 m² 3,000 m²
Hotels 750 m² 3,000 m²
Datacentres (E-II) Sprinkler mandatory 2,000 m²
Industrial (<6.7 m height) 1,500 m² 10,000 m²
Hazardous buildings Sprinkler mandatory 500 m²
Warehouses (<5 m height) Sprinkler mandatory 5,000 m²

Always-Required Compartmentation (New, Cl. 4.5.3.2)

Regardless of size or area, the following rooms must always be enclosed with 2-hour fire-rated construction:

  • Electrical rooms, UPS rooms, battery rooms
  • Server rooms, IT networking rooms, MDF/IDF rooms
  • Lift machine rooms
  • Network switch rooms, MCR rooms, MUX rooms, telecom equipment rooms
  • Janitor storage rooms, chemical storage rooms, QA/QC laboratories

Also new: all live cooking areas (any fuel — induction, LPG, PNG) must be segregated with 120 min fire-rated construction (Cl. 4.5.3.6). Pantries, buffet stations, and microwave areas are exempt.

5. EV Parking Fire Safety — Entirely New

NBC 2016 had no provisions for electric vehicle parking. NBCS 2026 introduces a complete framework:

  • All buildings with EV parking in podium or basements → sprinklered to CL-5 level (the highest protection level)
  • Rate-of-rise heat sensors mandatory in EV parks and charging areas
  • Smoke detectors in all basement areas except ICE vehicle parks
  • CO sensors in ICE vehicle parks to activate ventilation systems
  • EV charging areas must be compartmented
  • Buildings closer than 9 m apart with EV parking → CL-5 protection regardless of other factors
⚡ Practical Impact

If you are developing any building with an EV charging facility in the basement or podium — residential, commercial, or mixed-use — NBCS 2026 mandates the highest protection level. This affects budgets, sprinkler design, and fire alarm specifications significantly.

6. Datacentre Fire Safety (Group E-II)

The creation of Group E-II is arguably the most consequential new occupancy classification in NBCS 2026, given the pace of datacentre investment in India.

Provision NBC 2016 Part 4 NBCS 2026 Part F (E-II)
Occupancy class Under Business (Group E) Dedicated Group E-II
Occupant load — data halls Not specified 50 m² gross/person
Occupant load — admin areas 9.3 m² net/person 20 m² gross/person
Travel distance 30/45 m (un/sprinklered) NA unsprinklered / 60 m sprinklered
Compartmentation Not specified 2,000 m² (sprinklered, mandatory)
Smoke detection Standard fire alarm Aspiration high-sensitivity (VESDA-type)
Suppression options General Clean agent gas or pre-action sprinkler
Sprinkler requirement Area-based Always mandatory

7. Fire Detection and Suppression — New Technologies

NBC 2016 referenced IS 2189 broadly. NBCS 2026 goes further, formally classifying 14 detection technologies and 11 suppression systems with a hazard-suitability matrix (Tables 9–11) — a first for any Indian building standard.

New Detection Technologies Formally Recognised

  • Pneumatic linear high-sensitivity heat detection (copper/steel/Teflon tubing)
  • Aspiration high-sensitivity smoke detection (VESDA-type)
  • Flame / gas / spark detection (UV, IR, multi-spectrum)
  • Video smoke/flame detection
  • Gas detection (CO, CO₂, H₂, LPG, refrigerants)
  • Fuel leak detection (hydrocarbon sensing cables)
  • High-ceiling beam detectors (for spaces >8 m)
  • Linear heat sensing cable
  • Probe-type heat detectors

New Suppression Systems Formally Recognised

  • Automatic water mist systems (Cl. 5.1.8)
  • Extinguishing systems with clean agents (Cl. 5.1.9)
  • Modular panel/rack suppression systems
  • Nitrogen injection systems
  • Aerosol-based fire suppression systems
  • Wet chemical kitchen suppression systems
💡 New Rule on Hypoxic Air Technology

NBCS 2026 explicitly prohibits hypoxic air (oxygen-reduced atmosphere) fire prevention systems in occupiable areas, citing tenancy concerns. This technology must be used only with specific caution and authority consultation.

8. Fire Protection System Upgrades

Pump and Water Storage Changes

  • Soft starter or VFD mandatory for all fire pumps (was not specified in NBC 2016)
  • Pump shutoff pressure: must not exceed 12 bar for buildings >60 m
  • Multi-level pumping required for building clusters >45 m; water storage at every 45 m above ground
  • Cluster of buildings: 2,500 lpm at 10 bar + 2,55,000 litres water storage for up to 5 buildings
  • Water storage sharing now permitted between adjacent properties/industry clusters
  • Dry riser alternative now formally permitted where municipal supply maintains 24×7 adequate pressure

Sprinkler Installation Changes

  • All ramps at all levels must be sprinkler-protected (new requirement)
  • Sprinkler flow switches must be monitored by fire alarm panel
  • Provisions mandatory to prevent water from sprinkler/hydrant operations entering lifts and electrical rooms
  • Pendant sprinkler without false ceiling: 250 mm circular plate required around sprinkler head
  • Sprinkler piping may match interiors but must have 100 mm red band every 3 m; heads must never be painted

Smoke Exhaust Fan Rating (New)

All mechanical smoke exhaust fans must now be fire-rated at 250°C for 120 minutes — a specific requirement absent from NBC 2016.

9. Gas Safety — New Provisions

  • LPG kitchens explicitly prohibited in basements — only induction/PNG/electricity-based kitchens permitted (Cl. 4.7.9)
  • Gas lines prohibited in: enclosed staircases, electrical shafts, escape routes, refuge areas/floors (Cl. 4.7.8)
  • Seismic shut-off valve now required at main distribution point for mixed-use assembly and institutional buildings >15 m (Cl. 4.7.5)
  • Buildings >100 m using LPG reticulation: gas leak detectors mandatory, monitored from fire command centre, using circuit integrity cables (Cl. 4.7.7)

10. New Annexures in NBCS 2026

Annexure Topic Status
Annex F Requirements for Data Centres New
Annex G Car Parking Facilities (incl. EV charging) New
Annex K Refuge Area Design Requirements New
Annex M Performance-Based Fire Safety Design New
Annex A Calorific Values of Common Materials Retained
Annex B Industrial Hazard Classification Retained
Annex C Fire Resistance Data (expanded — steel protection) Expanded
Annex D Additional Requirements for High-Rise Buildings Expanded
Annex E Atrium Requirements Retained

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. Is NBCS 2026 mandatory?
Ans. No. NBCS 2026 Part F is explicitly advisory. Fire Services is a State subject. Enforceability depends on each State/UT adopting the standard through their Building Bye-Laws or Fire Services Act. Consult your applicable State regulations.
Q. Does my existing building need to comply with NBCS 2026?
Ans. Existing buildings need not comply unless altered (Cl. 3.3). However, alterations covering ≥1,000 m² or occupancy changes require local fire authority approval and must meet new building safety requirements. Any alteration must not reduce the existing level of fire and life safety.
Q. What is the new high-rise threshold for residential buildings?
Ans. Under NBCS 2026, the full fire safety provisions apply to residential buildings 24 m and above in height — raised from 15 m in NBC 2016. Below 24 m but with floor area exceeding 750 m² on any single floor, the provisions still apply.
Q. What are the EV parking fire safety requirements under NBCS 2026?
Ans. Any building with EV parking in podium or basements must be sprinklered to CL-5 (highest) protection level. Rate-of-rise heat sensors are mandatory in EV parks, smoke detectors in other basement areas, and CO sensors in ICE vehicle parks. EV charging areas must be compartmented.
Q. Does NBCS 2026 cover metro station fire safety?
Ans. Yes — for the first time. Clause 6.4.4 provides dedicated fire protection and firefighting system requirements for metro stations and metro trainway occupancy, covering underground, elevated, and at-grade stations.

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