The NYC fireguard certificate of fitness is required for individuals who perform fire watch duties in New York City. If you're preparing for the fireguard exam—whether for the F-01 or F-02 certificate—understanding what the test covers and practicing with realistic questions is the most effective way to pass.
This guide explains the fireguard exam system, what differentiates F-01 from F-02 certificates, what topics appear on the exams, and how to prepare systematically for test day.
New York City's FDNY (Fire Department of New York) issues multiple types of fireguard certificates of fitness. Understanding which certificate applies to your role is essential before you start studying.
The F-01 certificate is specifically for individuals who supervise or perform fire watch during torch operations—welding, cutting, soldering, and other hot work involving open flames or heat-generating equipment. F-01 holders are responsible for monitoring hot work areas during the operation and for a period after work stops to ensure no smoldering materials ignite delayed fires.
The F-02 certificate is for fire watch in buildings where fire protection systems (sprinklers, alarms, standpipes) are impaired, out of service, or under repair. When a building's fire protection systems are taken offline for maintenance or malfunction, an F-02 certified fireguard must continuously patrol the affected areas to maintain fire safety coverage until the systems are restored.
Both certificates are issued by the FDNY and require passing a written examination. The exam content overlaps substantially—both cover fire watch procedures, FDNY regulations, fire safety fundamentals, and emergency response—but each certificate has specific content related to its particular application.
The FDNY Certificate of Fitness examination is administered at the FDNY's Certificate of Fitness unit at MetroTech Center in Brooklyn. The exam is in-person, written, and multiple choice. You must bring two forms of ID (one government-issued photo ID) and the completed application.
The exam covers:
Questions are practical and scenario-based—they test whether you know what to do in real fire watch situations, not just whether you can recite definitions.
One of the most fundamental requirements for any fireguard is continuous patrol of the assigned area. You cannot leave the watch area without a replacement. The exam tests your understanding of when patrol must occur, how frequently, and what conditions require you to stay until your replacement arrives.
Fireguards must recognize fire hazards—combustible materials stored near hot work, blocked exits, inoperable fire extinguishers, faulty electrical equipment—and know how to report them. The exam includes questions on what constitutes a reportable hazard and the proper reporting chain.
If you discover a fire during your watch, what's the sequence of actions? FDNY protocols emphasize specific steps: alert occupants, activate the alarm, call 911, begin evacuation, and do not use elevators. The sequence and specific steps are tested.
Fireguards must maintain accurate records of their patrols—time, areas covered, any hazards observed or reported. FDNY regulations specify what must be recorded. Log-keeping questions appear regularly on the exam.
For F-02 holders, knowing what to do when a fire protection system is impaired is central to the role. This includes understanding how to identify that a system is truly out of service (not just in test mode), what notification is required when systems go down, and how to conduct fire watch for different types of impairment.
The FDNY Certificate of Fitness exam draws directly from FDNY regulations and the New York City Fire Code. You need to know:
FDNY publishes study materials for each certificate of fitness examination on its website. Reading the official study guide before taking the exam is strongly recommended—the exam content follows it closely.
The fireguard exam isn't an academic test—it's a practical knowledge test. The best preparation is knowing the job: what fireguards actually do, what the FDNY requires, and how to respond in fire emergencies. Here's how to prepare effectively:
FDNY provides a specific study guide for each certificate of fitness examination. Download and read the guide for the certificate you're pursuing (F-01 or F-02). The exam questions come from this material—there's no substitute for reading the source document.
You don't need to memorize every section of the New York City Fire Code, but you need to know the sections relevant to your certificate. For F-01, that's the hot work permit and torch operations provisions. For F-02, it's the impaired fire protection systems provisions. The FDNY study guide will point you to the relevant code sections.
Scenario-based questions on fire discovery, evacuation procedures, and emergency communication are common on the exam. Walk through these scenarios mentally before test day: you discover smoke on the 12th floor of a high-rise under fire watch—what exactly do you do, in what order? The correct sequence should be automatic.
Practice questions are the best way to identify gaps in your knowledge before the exam. Our practice tests cover FDNY regulations, fire watch duties, fire protection systems, and emergency procedures. Work through multiple sets under timed conditions to build confidence and pace.
For detailed study on specific exam domains, our fireguard roles and responsibilities, fire protection systems, emergency response procedures, and fire watch and patrol duties practice sets cover the primary exam domains.
Beyond exam preparation, there are practical things to know about the FDNY Certificate of Fitness process:
For a broader overview of the fireguard role and how the F-02 Certificate of Fitness system works, our complete fireguard guide covers the role's history, requirements, and what the job involves day-to-day. For army or military fireguard context, our guide to army fireguard duties explains how the military fire watch role differs from FDNY certification.
The FDNY fireguard certificate is a practical credential that requires practical knowledge. If you've read the official study guide, understand the fire watch procedures specific to your certificate (F-01 for torch operations, F-02 for impaired systems), and practiced with realistic exam questions, you're well-positioned to pass.
The fireguard role carries real responsibility—you're the person who maintains fire safety when normal systems can't. The exam tests whether you're ready for that responsibility. Prepared candidates who take it seriously consistently pass.