NSW guides + tools
Exit systems (NSW fire safety measure)
A practical guide to keeping evidence aligned to your NSW Fire Safety Schedule — so your AFSS is faster to prepare.
On this page
How exit systems appear in fire safety schedules, what to record, and common pitfalls.
Quick answer
Exit systems is commonly listed as an essential (or sometimes critical) measure in a Fire Safety Schedule. The simplest way to stay organised is to keep a per-measure register entry with a consistent evidence folder.
Always follow your schedule wording and use qualified providers for testing/servicing requirements.
What to record (register fields)
- Measure name exactly as written in the schedule
- Measure ID / reference (if any)
- Location(s) in the building
- Assessment date
- Who assessed it (company + person)
- Evidence files (reports, photos, invoices)
- Notes (issues found / follow-up)
Evidence folder structure
/evidence/exit-systems/
/2025-12-26/
report.pdf
photos/
notes.txt
This is just a suggestion — use what works for you.
Common pitfalls
- Evidence exists but isn’t linked to the measure
- Measure names don’t match the schedule (hard to reconcile later)
- No dates/photos — hard to prove what happened when
Official references
Primary sources to confirm templates and general guidance.
| Source | Link |
|---|---|
| NSW Planning Portal — Fire safety certification | Open |
| Fire safety statement template (DOCX) — NSW Planning | Open |