FireWatch Services in Maryland
Certified FireWatch Coverage That Meets Maryland Fire Code Requirements
Your Maryland FireWatch Coverage Starts Here
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When a building’s fire alarm or sprinkler system goes offline, Maryland’s Office of the State Fire Marshal, operating under the Public Safety Article, Title 6, has the authority to require a qualified fire watch until the system is restored, and local jurisdictions layer their own fire code enforcement on top of the state requirement. IronWatch Security provides trained, licensed FireWatch officers who patrol your property at regular intervals, log every round, and coordinate directly with local fire marshals across Montgomery County and Prince George’s County to keep your building compliant while systems are down.
IronWatch builds Maryland FireWatch coverage around your property’s timeline, not a generic package.
Every property has a different layout, occupancy level, and fire marshal directive, and IronWatch adapts FireWatch coverage accordingly, whether it’s a residential community in Silver Spring, a commercial building in Bethesda, or a medical facility with occupants who can’t self-evacuate quickly. Officers document each patrol in a logbook that stays on-site for the duration of the assignment, ready for inspection at any time.
Many Maryland clients also operate properties in Virginia or Washington D.C., each with its own fire code and local enforcement. IronWatch coordinates FireWatch coverage across all three, so a multi-property client works with one team and one point of contact instead of separate providers for each jurisdiction.
When does a Maryland property need a FireWatch?
Whenever a fire alarm, sprinkler system, or other fire protection feature is offline or impaired, the local fire marshal or Maryland’s Office of the State Fire Marshal can require a fire watch until the system is restored or repaired.
Can building staff or tenants perform the FireWatch instead of hiring a FireWatch company?
Maryland fire marshals typically require FireWatch to be performed by qualified personnel whose sole responsibility during the assignment is the fire watch itself, not building staff handling it alongside their regular duties. IronWatch officers are trained and available specifically for this role.
Which areas of Maryland does IronWatch cover?
We serve the DC metro corridor, including Montgomery County communities such as Bethesda, Silver Spring, Rockville, and Gaithersburg, as well as Prince George’s County. Contact us directly to confirm coverage for your location.
What does an IronWatch FireWatch officer actually do during a shift?
Officers patrol the property at set intervals, checking for fire hazards, blocked exits, and unsafe conditions, and log each round in a written record kept on-site. If an emergency arises, officers contact 911 immediately and assist with evacuation.
Does IronWatch coordinate directly with local fire marshals in Maryland?
Yes. IronWatch works with fire marshal offices across Montgomery County and Prince George’s County to confirm patrol requirements and documentation standards for each assignment.