Fire safety labels on solar installations warn emergency responders that dangerous DC electricity is present even when the mains supply is isolated. Unlike conventional electrical systems that can be made safe by turning off the main switch, solar panels continue generating voltage whenever light hits them – potentially hundreds of volts DC that cannot be switched off from ground level. Proper labelling ensures firefighters know the risks before entering a property or working on the roof.
UK regulations require specific warning labels at key locations: the meter box, consumer unit, DC isolator, inverter, and anywhere firefighters might encounter DC cables or equipment. These labels must be durable, clearly visible, and use standardised wording and symbols. Your installer is responsible for fitting compliant labels, and their presence is checked during MCS certification inspections.
This guide explains what labels are required, where they must be placed, what they should say, why they matter for firefighter safety, and what homeowners should check to ensure their system is properly labelled.
Quick Overview
| Purpose | Warn emergency services of DC electricity hazard |
| Why needed | Solar panels generate power whenever lit |
| Key locations | Meter box, consumer unit, isolators, inverter |
| UK regulations | BS 7671; MCS installation standards |
| Installer responsibility | Supply and fit compliant labels |
| Label durability | Must last lifetime of installation |
Why Fire Safety Labels Matter
The Solar-Specific Hazard
| Factor | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Always generating | Panels produce voltage in any light |
| Cannot be switched off remotely | DC present until panels covered |
| High voltage DC | String voltages 300-600V typical |
| DC more dangerous | Harder to let go; sustained arc |
The Building Research Establishment’s fire safety and photovoltaic systems guidance is the definitive UK reference on this hazard – including the specific risks that BRE has identified from real fire investigations, where AC isolators have been mistakenly used in DC circuits, leading to heat build-up. For the underlying electrical-shock physics, see our complementary guide on can solar panels electrocute you.
Firefighter Safety Concerns
| Scenario | Risk |
|---|---|
| Roof firefighting | Contact with live DC cables/equipment |
| Cutting into roof | May cut through DC cables |
| Water application | Conductivity concerns with DC |
| Assuming power off | Mains isolation doesn’t affect DC side |
What Labels Achieve
| Function | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Alert to presence | Firefighters know solar is installed |
| Warn of hazards | Understand DC voltage present |
| Guide to equipment | Locate isolators and inverter |
| Inform tactics | Adjust firefighting approach |
UK Regulatory Requirements
Key Standards
| Standard | Coverage |
|---|---|
| BS 7671 | IET Wiring Regulations – labelling requirements |
| Section 712 | Solar PV specific requirements |
| MCS MIS 3002 | MCS installation standard |
| BS EN 50549 | Generation connection requirements |
For the broader earthing-and-bonding side of BS 7671 Section 712 – which covers the same parts of the regulations – see our guide on earthing and grounding solar systems. Both labelling and earthing fall under the solar-PV-specific section of the IET Wiring Regulations.
BS 7671 Requirements
| Regulation | Requirement |
|---|---|
| 712.514.1 | Warning labels for PV systems |
| 514.15 | Warning notice for dual supplies |
| 537.4 | Fireman’s switch requirements |
| General | Labels must be durable and legible |
MCS Requirements
| Aspect | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Compliance | Must meet BS 7671 labelling |
| Inspection | Labels checked during certification |
| Documentation | Label placement noted in handover |
| Quality | Durable labels specified |
Required Labels and Locations
Overview of Required Labels
| Location | Label Purpose |
|---|---|
| Meter box | First point of entry for firefighters |
| Consumer unit | Where mains would be isolated |
| DC isolator (roof) | Identify DC shutdown point |
| DC isolator (inverter) | Identify DC input isolation |
| AC isolator | Identify AC shutdown point |
| Inverter | Identify equipment and hazards |
| DC cable routes | Where cables run through building |
Meter Box Label
| Aspect | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Location | Visible on or near meter box |
| Purpose | Alert to solar presence |
| Content | Solar PV installed; isolator location |
| Visibility | Immediately visible to emergency services |
Consumer Unit Label
| Aspect | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Location | At or adjacent to consumer unit |
| Purpose | Warn of dual supply |
| Standard wording | “WARNING – DUAL SUPPLY” |
| Additional info | Isolate both supplies |
Inverter Label
| Aspect | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Location | On or adjacent to inverter |
| Content | DC voltage present; isolation procedure |
| Manufacturer labels | Usually pre-fitted |
| Additional labels | Installer adds as required |
DC Isolator Labels
| Location | Label Content |
|---|---|
| Roof-level isolator | DC ISOLATOR; voltage rating |
| Inverter-side isolator | DC ISOLATOR; solar PV |
| Both locations | Warning symbol; isolation instructions |
Label Content and Wording
Standard Warning Notices
| Label Type | Standard Wording |
|---|---|
| Dual supply | “WARNING – DUAL SUPPLY – Isolate both mains and solar supplies before working” |
| DC present | “WARNING – SOLAR PV – DC cables present – Isolate DC and AC before working” |
| Shock risk | “DANGER – Risk of electric shock – DC voltage present during daylight” |
Information to Include
| Information | Purpose |
|---|---|
| System type | Identifies as solar PV |
| Voltage level | Indicates hazard severity |
| Isolator locations | Where to disconnect |
| Installer contact | For technical queries |
Symbols Used
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Yellow triangle | Warning/caution |
| Lightning bolt | Electrical hazard |
| Red circle with line | Prohibition |
| Sun symbol | Solar/PV system |
Example Label Texts
| Location | Example Text |
|---|---|
| Meter box | “SOLAR PV SYSTEM INSTALLED – DC isolator in loft – Inverter in garage” |
| Consumer unit | “WARNING: DUAL SUPPLY – This installation has a second source of supply. Isolate PV array and mains before working.” |
| DC isolator | “DC ISOLATOR – SOLAR PV – 600V DC MAX” |
| Inverter | “DANGER: DC voltage present during daylight hours even when AC isolated” |
DC Cable Route Labels
Where Required
| Location | Reason |
|---|---|
| Loft space entry | Cables may run through loft |
| Internal cable runs | Where cables pass through building |
| Riser cupboards | Vertical cable routes |
| At intervals along route | Every few metres in accessible areas |
Cable Warning Labels
| Content | Purpose |
|---|---|
| “DANGER – SOLAR DC CABLES” | Alert to cable presence |
| Voltage rating | Indicate hazard level |
| “DO NOT CUT” | Prevent accidental damage |
| Arrow direction | Show cable route |
Loft and Roof Space
| Location | Label Requirement |
|---|---|
| Loft hatch | Warning of DC cables inside |
| Inside loft | Labels on conduit/trunking |
| Junction boxes | DC junction box warnings |
| Roof penetration | Where cables enter from array |
DC arc faults in unlabelled cable runs are one of the few real fire-ignition pathways in solar PV. Modern systems mitigate this with arc-fault detection circuitry built into the inverter – see our arc fault detection guide for the technical detail.
Label Specifications
Durability Requirements
| Property | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Lifespan | Must last installation lifetime (25+ years) |
| UV resistance | Essential for external labels |
| Weather resistance | Waterproof; fade resistant |
| Adhesion | Must stay attached |
Material Options
| Material | Suitability |
|---|---|
| Engraved plastic | Excellent; very durable |
| Anodised aluminium | Excellent; premium option |
| UV-stable vinyl | Good; more affordable |
| Laminated | Good if quality lamination |
| Paper/card | Not acceptable; will degrade |
Colour Requirements
| Element | Colour |
|---|---|
| Warning labels | Yellow background; black text |
| Danger labels | Red and white; black text |
| Information labels | White or blue background |
| Symbols | Standard safety colours |
Size Requirements
| Factor | Guidance |
|---|---|
| Visibility | Readable from working distance |
| Text size | Minimum 3mm height typical |
| Label size | Proportionate to location |
| Meter box | Often 100mm × 50mm or larger |
Firefighter Information Box
What It Is
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Purpose | Comprehensive system info for firefighters |
| Location | Near meter box or main entry point |
| Content | System diagram; isolator locations |
| Requirement | Good practice; some areas require |
Contents
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| System size | kWp rating |
| Number of panels | Total panel count |
| DC voltage | Maximum system voltage |
| Isolator locations | DC and AC isolators |
| Inverter location | Where inverter is installed |
| Simple diagram | Layout of system components |
| Installer contact | Emergency contact number |
Benefits
| Benefit | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Quick reference | All info in one place |
| Tactical planning | Firefighters can plan approach |
| Equipment location | Know where to isolate |
| Risk assessment | Understand voltage levels |
Battery Storage Additional Labels
Battery-Specific Hazards
| Hazard | Label Required |
|---|---|
| Stored energy | Battery contains energy 24/7 |
| Thermal runaway | Fire risk if damaged |
| Toxic fumes | If battery burns |
| Cannot be de-energised | Always live until discharged |
Battery Warning Labels
| Location | Content |
|---|---|
| On battery unit | Manufacturer warnings; voltage |
| Adjacent to battery | Isolation procedure |
| Meter box | Battery storage installed |
| Consumer unit | Battery backup present |
If you’ve added a battery to an existing solar system, the labels need updating to reflect the change. See our battery retrofit guide for what should be re-checked at the same time as the labels.
Combined PV and Battery Labels
| System Type | Label Update |
|---|---|
| PV only | Standard PV labels |
| PV + battery | Add battery warnings |
| Key message | Energy stored even at night |
| Isolation | Both PV and battery to isolate |
Rapid Shutdown Labels
What Rapid Shutdown Is
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Function | Reduces DC voltage on roof quickly |
| Requirement | Not mandatory in UK (unlike US) |
| How it works | Module-level shutdown capability |
| If fitted | Label indicating presence |
Labels for Systems With Rapid Shutdown
| Location | Content |
|---|---|
| Initiation point | Rapid shutdown switch location |
| Near meter | System has rapid shutdown |
| Operation | Instructions to activate |
Module-Level Electronics
| Technology | Shutdown Behaviour |
|---|---|
| Microinverters | AC on roof; DC at panel only (~40V) |
| Optimisers (SolarEdge) | SafeDC – drops to 1V per panel |
| Standard string | Full DC voltage until covered |
| Labels should indicate | Type of shutdown available |
A microinverter system inherently delivers most of what a “rapid shutdown” provides because the high-voltage DC string never exists – each panel converts to AC immediately. From a fire-safety labelling perspective, a microinverter system needs different wording to a string-inverter system because the DC hazard is much more localised.
Commercial and Large System Labels
Additional Requirements
| System Size | Additional Labels |
|---|---|
| >10kW | More comprehensive labelling |
| Multiple arrays | Each array identified |
| Multiple inverters | Each inverter labelled |
| Long cable runs | More route markers |
Fire Strategy Documentation
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Fire strategy | May need updating for solar |
| Risk assessment | Solar-specific fire risks |
| Building plans | Show solar installation |
| O&M manual | Include emergency procedures |
Installer Responsibilities
Label Supply and Fitting
| Task | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Source labels | Compliant, durable labels |
| Fit correctly | Right label, right location |
| Secure attachment | Won’t fall off |
| Visible placement | Easy to see and read |
Documentation
| Document | Label Information |
|---|---|
| Handover pack | List of labels fitted |
| Photos | Label locations documented |
| Commissioning checklist | Labels verified |
| MCS certificate | Confirms compliant installation |
If you’re checking whether an installer’s quote covers everything they should be doing – including label supply and fitting – our solar panel quote checker walks through the line items a compliant quote should always show.
Common Installer Mistakes
| Mistake | Problem |
|---|---|
| Using paper labels | Will fade and fall off |
| Missing locations | Firefighters not warned |
| Wrong information | Incorrect voltages or locations |
| Poor placement | Not visible when needed |
Homeowner Checks
What to Look For
| Location | Check |
|---|---|
| Meter box | Solar PV warning label present |
| Consumer unit | Dual supply warning present |
| Inverter | Warning labels attached |
| DC isolator | Clearly labelled |
| All labels | Legible; not faded or peeling |
Label Condition Check
| Issue | Action |
|---|---|
| Faded text | Request replacement |
| Peeling labels | Request replacement |
| Missing labels | Contact installer |
| Damaged labels | Request replacement |
Annual Visual Check
| Check | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Labels present | Annual |
| Labels legible | Annual |
| Labels secure | Annual |
| Information accurate | After any system changes |
What If Labels Are Missing
Steps to Take
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1. Contact installer | Request they fit missing labels |
| 2. Check warranty | Workmanship should cover this |
| 3. If installer unavailable | Contact another MCS installer |
| 4. Source labels | Buy compliant labels online |
| 5. Have fitted by professional | Ensure correct placement |
Where to Buy Labels
| Source | Notes |
|---|---|
| Electrical wholesalers | Professional quality |
| Solar suppliers | System-specific labels |
| Online specialists | Various options |
| Ensure compliance | Check durability standards |
Firefighter Awareness
What Fire Services Know
| Training | Coverage |
|---|---|
| Solar PV awareness | Part of firefighter training |
| Hazard recognition | DC electricity risks |
| Label interpretation | Understanding warnings |
| Tactical approaches | Modified firefighting tactics |
Fire Service Guidance
| Guidance | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| National Operational Guidance | UK fire service standard |
| PV-specific guidance | Available to all services |
| Key principle | DC present until panels covered |
| Safe distance | Maintain from DC components |
How Labels Help Firefighters
| Stage | Label Benefit |
|---|---|
| Arrival | Know solar installed before entering |
| Size-up | Locate equipment and cables |
| Operations | Avoid live DC areas |
| Post-incident | Safe isolation procedure |
For broader storm and incident risks – including post-event safety inspection – see our storm damage solar panels guide, which covers what to do (and what not to do) after any major weather or fire event affecting a solar installation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Basic Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Are labels legally required? | Yes – BS 7671 and MCS require them |
| Who supplies labels? | Installer provides and fits |
| Can I fit my own labels? | Not recommended – ensure compliance |
| How long should labels last? | Lifetime of installation (25+ years) |
Technical Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| What if labels have faded? | Contact installer for replacement |
| Do I need to update labels? | Yes if system modified |
| Where should meter box label be? | Inside door or on front – visible |
| Are there standard label designs? | Various compliant options available |
Summary
| Aspect | Key Point |
|---|---|
| Purpose | Warn emergency services of DC hazards |
| Requirement | BS 7671 and MCS require labels |
| Key locations | Meter, consumer unit, isolators, inverter |
| Content | Solar presence; voltage; isolation info |
| Durability | Must last 25+ years |
| Responsibility | Installer supplies and fits |
| Homeowner check | Annual visual inspection |
| If missing/damaged | Contact installer for replacement |
Fire safety labels are a critical but often overlooked aspect of solar installations. They serve one vital purpose: ensuring firefighters know that dangerous DC electricity is present even when the mains supply is isolated. Solar panels generate voltage whenever light hits them – this cannot be switched off remotely, and string voltages of 300-600V DC present serious shock and arc flash risks.
UK regulations require warning labels at all key points: the meter box (first point of entry for emergency services), consumer unit (where someone might assume isolating the mains makes everything safe), DC and AC isolators, and the inverter. Cable routes through the building should also be marked, particularly in loft spaces where firefighters might work without realising DC cables are present.
Your installer is responsible for supplying and fitting compliant labels as part of the installation. Labels must be durable enough to last the lifetime of the system – typically 25+ years – which means proper materials like engraved plastic or UV-stable vinyl rather than paper or card. The presence and condition of labels is checked during MCS inspections.
As a homeowner, you should visually check your labels annually to ensure they’re still present, legible, and securely attached. If any labels are missing, faded, or damaged, contact your installer to arrange replacements. These small labels could save lives in an emergency – they deserve the same attention as any other safety feature of your home.
The five-minute walk-around. Once a year, take five minutes and physically check your labels. Open the meter box – is the “Solar PV installed” label still legible? Look at the consumer unit – is the dual-supply warning visible? Walk to wherever your inverter lives (loft, garage, utility room) – are the inverter and DC isolator labels still attached and readable? In the loft, can you see “Solar DC cables” markers on the conduit runs?
If any are faded, peeling, or missing, photograph them and email your installer. Workmanship warranties cover this – it’s their responsibility to maintain compliance for the duration of that warranty. If your original installer has gone out of business, any MCS-registered electrician can refit compliant labels; expect to pay around £100-150 for a label-only callout. Don’t be tempted by paper or printer-printed labels you’ve made yourself – they’ll fade in months and may invalidate compliance certifications.