Compare Fire & Life-Safety Inspection Software
Independent, vendor-neutral reviews and side-by-side comparisons for fire & life-safety inspection (ITM) software. No vendor bias. Real criteria.
Best-Of Roundups
See all →Affordable Fire Inspection Software: Best Value Picks (2026)
affordable fire inspection software
Best Backflow Testing Software (2026): Top Picks for Fire Protection Contractors
backflow testing software
Best Fire Alarm Inspection Software (2026): Top Platforms Reviewed
fire alarm inspection software
Best Fire Extinguisher Inspection Software (2026): Top Picks Reviewed
fire extinguisher inspection software
Best Fire Inspection App for iPhone, Android & iPad (2026)
fire inspection app
Best Fire Inspection Software for Small Business (2026)
fire inspection software small business
Top-Rated Software
All reviews →Inspect Point
Run your entire fire inspection business — from inspection to collection — in one platform.
Compliance Guides
All guides →AHJ Submission in Fire Inspection: What It Is and How It Works
AHJ submission is the formal process by which a licensed fire protection contractor delivers completed inspection, testing, and maintenance reports to the Authority Having Jurisdiction after a fire system inspection. Many jurisdictions now mandate electronic submission through platforms like The Compliance Engine (TCE) by Brycer or IROL, making software with native AHJ integration a practical necessity.
Backflow Tester Certification Requirements by State
Backflow tester certification is required in most U.S. states before you can legally test and certify backflow prevention assemblies. Requirements vary by state — and sometimes by water utility — covering the exam, hands-on hours, approved providers, and renewal periods. Here's what fire protection and plumbing contractors need to know.
Fire Extinguisher Inspection Requirements: NFPA 10 & OSHA Explained
Fire extinguisher inspection requirements under NFPA 10 mandate monthly visual checks by building owners, annual maintenance by certified technicians, a 6-year internal examination for dry-chemical units, and hydrostatic pressure testing every 5 or 12 years depending on type. OSHA 29 CFR 1910.157 independently requires monthly and annual inspections in all workplaces.
What's in a Fire Inspection Report: Required Elements and Record-Keeping Rules
A fire inspection report must include the date of service, inspector identification, system components inspected, pass/fail test results for each device, any deficiencies with their severity classification, and the system's status at the end of service. Records must be kept for at least 3 years on-site where the IFC is adopted, and initial installation records must be kept for the life of the system.
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Industry-specific
Built for fire-protection ITM contractors. We evaluate on NFPA compliance, AHJ submission, and mobile field use — not generic SaaS criteria.