If you work in a building that requires fire safety monitoring in New York City, chances are you'll need either an F-01 or F-02 Certificate of Fitness. Both are issued by the FDNY (New York City Fire Department), both are commonly called "fireguard" certifications, and they're often grouped together under the shorthand F-01-02. But they cover different scenarios—and getting the wrong one can mean you're not legally covered for your specific duties.
This guide breaks down the F-01 and F-02 certificates: what each covers, the exam requirements, and how to prepare effectively.
The Certificate of Fitness (CoF) is an FDNY credential required for people who perform specific fire safety tasks in New York City buildings. There are dozens of different Certificate of Fitness designations—covering everything from citywide inspection of oil burners to handling compressed gases—but the F-01 and F-02 are among the most common because they apply to general building occupancy and fire monitoring situations.
The fireguard designation, whether F-01 or F-02, is what you need to serve as a designated fire watch or fire safety personnel in scenarios specified by the NYC Fire Code. These positions aren't optional for the buildings that require them—the code mandates they be filled by people with the correct certification.
The F-01 and F-02 cover different occupancy types and contexts:
F-01 Certificate of Fitness (Citywide Fire Guard for Impairment): Required for people performing fire watch when a building's fire protection systems are impaired—meaning sprinklers are down for maintenance, alarm systems are offline, or suppression systems are temporarily out of service. F-01 fireguards conduct patrols during these impairment periods and provide manual fire watch until systems are restored.
F-02 Certificate of Fitness (Fire Guard for Burning Operations): Covers fire watch during welding, cutting, burning, and other hot work operations. Hot work generates sparks and heat that can ignite fires, so an F-02 fireguard must be present to monitor the area during operations and for a specified period afterward.
In everyday usage, people often say "F-02" when they mean the general fireguard certification, but technically F-01 and F-02 serve different purposes. Many workers in fire safety roles hold both—some employers require it.
You'll need an F-01 if you work in any of these scenarios:
You'll need an F-02 if you:
Some employers in hospitality, property management, and construction require both F-01 and F-02. The certifications are separate exams but can be taken together.
To apply for an F-01 or F-02 Certificate of Fitness, you must:
There are no formal education requirements—you don't need a GED, diploma, or prior fire safety certification. The barrier is the exam itself, not academic prerequisites. That said, you do need to read and understand the study material, which is in English.
You can schedule an exam appointment through the FDNY's online portal. Exams are given at the FDNY Licensing and Certification Unit at 9 MetroTech Center in Brooklyn, and at some other authorized testing locations in the five boroughs.
The FDNY Certificate of Fitness exam is a multiple-choice written test based on the study material the FDNY provides. For both F-01 and F-02, the study material is available on the FDNY website as a PDF document specific to each certificate type.
For the F-01, exam content covers:
For the F-02, content covers:
Both exams are open to anyone who's studied the material. The questions are straightforward but require careful reading—many wrong answers are plausible, and the correct answer depends on specific code language rather than general common sense.
Preparation is simpler than for most professional exams because the FDNY provides the exact study material the test is based on. There's no hidden curriculum. If you read and understand the official study guide, you can pass.
Here's what effective prep looks like:
The FDNY publishes Certificate of Fitness study materials on their website at nyc.gov/fdny. Download the specific study guide for the certificate you're testing for (F-01 or F-02). Don't use outdated or third-party study guides as your primary source—code updates change the correct answers, and using an old version can lead you to memorize wrong information.
Don't just skim the study guide. Read each section and ask yourself: what are the specific requirements here? What triggers a notification duty? What are the exact timing requirements? The exam rewards candidates who know the specifics, not just the general concepts.
Both F-01 and F-02 have specific protocols for who to notify, when, and how. These come up frequently in exam questions. Memorize the chain of notification—building management, FDNY, 911—and under what circumstances each applies.
Multiple-choice practice questions help you recognize how the exam phrases scenarios. The F-02 exam prep guide covers common question formats and the specific code provisions most frequently tested. Working through practice questions also reveals which sections you've understood clearly and which need more review.
You don't need to commit to a test date before you've studied. The exam is available on a rolling appointment basis, and there's no application window. Study first, then schedule when you're confident with the material. Most people who read the study guide thoroughly need 4–8 hours of total study time for each certificate.
A common point of confusion: the Certificate of Fitness is different from an FDNY License. Both are issued by the FDNY, but licenses cover certain higher-level activities (like operating specific equipment or managing certain types of hazardous materials). CoF positions like F-01 and F-02 are lower-credential fire safety roles—no prior certification required, just passing the exam.
Some roles require both a Certificate of Fitness and an FDNY License. If you're moving into fire safety management or more complex fire prevention roles, you may eventually need additional credentials. But for the fireguard F-01/F-02 designations, the Certificate of Fitness is the complete credential.
F-01 and F-02 Certificates of Fitness are valid for three years. Renewal requires passing the written examination again—there's no continuing education pathway for the fireguard CoFs. The renewal fee is the same as the original application ($25).
FDNY will mail renewal notices to the address on file before your certificate expires. If you move, update your address through the FDNY portal to avoid missing renewal notices. Working with an expired certificate is a code violation, and enforcement has tightened in recent years following FDNY audits of fire watch compliance in NYC buildings.
F-01 and F-02 fireguards are in demand across New York City. Large commercial properties, residential towers, hospitals, and construction sites all need them. Demand spikes during periods of heavy construction activity and during scheduled building maintenance that takes fire systems offline.
Many fireguard positions are filled through staffing agencies that specialize in security and fire safety personnel. Having both F-01 and F-02 certificates significantly broadens your employability. The fireguard license is often listed as a job requirement for building security, facilities management, and general contracting roles in NYC.
Pay varies widely—from roughly $18–$22/hour for staffing agency placements to higher for direct-hire positions at major commercial properties or construction firms. Holding both F-01 and F-02 and having demonstrated fireguard experience can support negotiation for higher-end roles in the field.