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Rating comparison

FD60 vs FD90: which fire door rating do you need?

In short

FD60 and FD90 are both certified fire doorsets, rated to resist fire for at least 60 and 90 minutes of integrity respectively (broadly E60 and Per certified design under BS EN 13501-2). The difference is duration: FD90 holds the line for 90 minutes where FD60 holds it for 60. FD60 is specified for protected stairways, compartment walls, plant rooms and taller residential blocks; FD90 for high-hazard compartmentation, significant compartment lines and industrial positions. The correct rating for any opening comes from the building's fire strategy and risk assessment, not a general rule.

60MINFD60integrity (E)
90MINFD90integrity (E)

FD60 vs FD90 at a glance

FD60FD90
Fire resistance60 minutes90 minutes
EN classification≈ E60 (integrity)Per certified design
Typical leafTypically 54 mmPer certified design
Where it is specifiedprotected stairways, compartment walls, plant rooms and taller residential blockshigh-hazard compartmentation, significant compartment lines and industrial positions

When FD60 is the right choice

Specify FD60 where the fire strategy calls for 60minutes' integrity — protected stairways, compartment walls, plant rooms and taller residential blocks. Stepping up to a higher rating than the strategy requires adds cost and weight without adding compliance; the rating should match the assessed risk at each opening.

When to step up to FD90

FD90 is specified where the fire strategy or Approved Document B demands 90 minutes rather than 60high-hazard compartmentation, significant compartment lines and industrial positions. At this rating the doorset construction is heavier and, above FD60, the design and glazing become more restricted; confirm what is achievable against the certified field of application.

Both figures describe integrity (E) — resisting flame and hot gases — not insulation (EI), which limits heat transfer and is separately tested. Leaf thicknesses are typical, not mandatory; the certified design governs. Also see FD30 vs FD60, the full range (FD30–FD120), or run the compliance checker.