WLD/Processes/TBT-WLD-014
Welding Near Flammable Materials
Welding & Fabrication › Processes › Welding Near Flammable Materials
Welding Near Flammable Materials
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-WLD-014 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Welding near flammable materials is one of the most common causes of fire on construction sites.
- Sparks, spatter, and hot slag from welding can travel up to 10 metres and ignite combustible materials.
- Flammable materials include timber, insulation, solvents, paint, plastic sheeting, and accumulated dust.
- A hot works permit is mandatory before any welding takes place near combustible or flammable materials.
- A fire watch must be maintained during welding and for a minimum of 60 minutes after work stops.
- Timber frame buildings, occupied buildings, and roofing projects are particularly high-risk environments.
- Fire blankets and spark-proof screens should be used to contain sparks and protect adjacent materials.
- A suitable fire extinguisher must be positioned within arm's reach of the welding operation at all times.
- The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires fire risk management for all hot works activities.
- Insurers typically impose specific hot works conditions — non-compliance can void fire insurance cover.
Why?
| Prevent site fires | Welding sparks ignite flammable materials causing devastating fires that destroy buildings and kill workers. |
| Legal requirement | The Fire Safety Order 2005 and site fire risk assessments require formal hot works controls and permits. |
| Insurance compliance | Most insurers require hot works permits and fire watch procedures — breach can void the site fire insurance. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Hot Works Fire Prevention | Fire Safety Awareness on Site |
RAMS Builder
Generate professional Risk Assessment and Method Statements in minutes. 10 document formats, site-specific content, instant Word download.