NFPA-96 is the national fire code that governs commercial kitchen exhaust hood design, installation, cleaning, and inspection. It applies to every commercial cooking operation that produces grease laden vapors, from full service restaurants to hotel kitchens and school cafeterias, and sets cleaning intervals of 1, 3, 6, or 12 months based on cooking volume. Compliance is not optional in Michigan. It is adopted through the state fire code and enforced by local fire marshals during annual inspections.
What Is NFPA-96?
NFPA-96 is the Standard for Ventilation Control and Fire Protection of Commercial Cooking Operations, published by the National Fire Protection Association. The most recent edition, NFPA-96 (2024), covers hood design, duct material and construction, clearance from combustibles, fire suppression integration, and the inspection and cleaning schedule for the full exhaust system. Reference: NFPA.org, Standard 96, 2024 edition.
Michigan adopts NFPA-96 through the Michigan Fire Prevention Code, and local jurisdictions enforce it through annual or biannual fire inspections. This is not an industry recommendation. It is law.
Who NFPA-96 Applies To
The standard applies to any commercial cooking operation that produces grease laden vapors, which is almost every foodservice operation. Specific categories include:
- Full service restaurants, fast casual, fast food, and QSR
- Hotels and motels with restaurant or banquet kitchens
- Commercial bakeries, delis, and sandwich shops with cooking appliances
- School, college, and university cafeterias
- Hospital and long term care food service
- Correctional facility kitchens
- Country clubs, banquet halls, and event venues
- Churches and houses of worship with commercial kitchens
- Day camps and summer programs with cooking facilities
- Commissary and central production kitchens
- Food trucks and mobile food units with Type I hoods
The key trigger is a Type I hood over a cooking appliance that produces grease vapor. Type II hoods over dishwashers and steamers are not covered by NFPA-96.
Inspection and Cleaning Frequency Requirements
NFPA-96 Section 11.4 sets the minimum inspection and cleaning frequency. The table below shows the standard. Your fire inspector or insurance carrier may require more frequent cleaning based on conditions observed on site.
| Cooking Volume Category | NFPA-96 Inspection | NFPA-96 Cleaning Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Solid fuel (wood, charcoal) | Monthly | Monthly |
| High volume (24 hr, charbroiling, wok) | Quarterly | Quarterly |
| Moderate volume | Semiannually | Every 6 months |
| Low volume (churches, day camps, seasonal) | Annually | Annually |
Note: the inspection and cleaning frequencies are linked. If inspection reveals grease buildup, cleaning is required whether the interval has elapsed or not.
What the Cleaning Must Cover
Per NFPA-96 Section 11.6, the cleaning must address the entire exhaust system from cooking appliance to rooftop termination. Specifically:
- Hood interior and filters. Remove baffle filters. Clean filters and the entire hood interior to bare metal.
- Plenum and grease collection trough. Fully remove grease accumulation.
- Horizontal duct runs. Open access panels. Clean all four interior surfaces.
- Vertical duct. Clean full length, including at changes of direction.
- Rooftop exhaust fan. Tilt fan housing, clean fan wheel and housing interior, restore.
- Grease containment. Verify grease collection and containment devices are functioning and cleaned.
Required Documentation After Cleaning
Per NFPA-96 Section 11.6.14, the cleaning contractor must provide written documentation. The certificate of cleaning must include:
- Name, address, and phone of the cleaning company
- Name of the technician who performed the work
- Date the cleaning was performed
- Areas cleaned and areas not accessible for cleaning
- Any recommendations for access panels or repairs
- Next inspection or cleaning due date
In addition, a dated sticker is applied inside the hood showing the cleaning date and next due interval. This is what your fire inspector looks for first.
Practical Tip
Keep three years of cleaning certificates on site in a dedicated binder. When the fire marshal arrives, hand them the binder before they ask. Inspections that start well tend to end well.
What Happens If You Fail an Inspection
The consequences of failing an NFPA-96 inspection escalate based on severity and repeated violations.
- First violation, minor. Written notice of violation. Typically 14 to 30 days to correct and provide documentation. No fine.
- First violation, serious. Written notice plus a fine, generally $100 to $500 per violation depending on jurisdiction. Deadline to correct is typically 7 to 14 days.
- Repeat violation or hazardous condition. Daily fines until corrected. Insurance carrier notification. Potential requirement for emergency cleaning before reopening cooking operations.
- Imminent fire hazard. Stop cooking order issued by the fire marshal. The kitchen cannot operate the affected exhaust until remediated and re inspected.
- Post fire investigation. If a grease fire occurred and cleaning records are missing, insurance claim denial is common. The denied claim routinely exceeds $100,000 in direct damage before business interruption losses.
Insurance Implications
Insurance carriers that underwrite restaurant property policies increasingly request proof of current NFPA-96 compliance at each renewal. What started as an optional document is now a standard underwriting item. A clean multi year file of certificates makes renewal routine. A missing or expired certificate triggers additional questions, can increase your premium, and in some cases can lead to non renewal.
After a loss, the first document the claims adjuster asks for is the cleaning history. An insurer has grounds to deny coverage if the insured failed to maintain the exhaust system as required by code. This is not hypothetical. Claim denial for inadequate hood maintenance is a well documented pattern in the industry.
Common NFPA-96 Findings We See in the Field
Here are the most frequent issues we find on first time accounts.
- Missing or insufficient access panels on horizontal duct. NFPA-96 requires access panels at every change of direction and at intervals not exceeding 12 feet.
- Grease build up on rooftop exhaust fan housing and fan wheel. Often ignored in cheaper cleanings.
- Damaged or missing baffle filters, or standard mesh filters used in place of baffle.
- Hinge kits missing on rooftop fans, preventing proper access.
- Grease dripping from duct seams onto the roof membrane, indicating duct leak and improper installation.
- Containment systems either missing or not emptied.
What to Do Next
If you are a restaurant owner or operator in Metro Detroit, your next steps are straightforward. Pull your cleaning records and confirm you are current on the NFPA-96 interval for your cooking type. Check the sticker inside the hood. If either is out of date, schedule the cleaning before your next fire inspection or policy renewal.
To get a quote on your own NFPA-96 cleaning, see our kitchen exhaust hood cleaning service page. For the broader case for using a commercial contractor, read our reasons to hire a professional pressure washing service guide. To understand our North Oakland service area coverage, see the Bloomfield commercial power washing page.