Fire-Retardant Curtains: What Hospitality and Commercial Projects Need to Know
Before you read — quick spec check: - IFR vs treated FR — which one? Compare here - Need both blackout and FR? See combined spec guidance - Need NFPA 701 certificates? Talk to the trade team
If your project involves curtains in a hotel, theater, event venue, healthcare facility, or any other commercial space, fire retardant curtains are not a design preference. They are a code requirement. In the United States, NFPA 701 is the standard that governs flame propagation testing for hanging textiles, and specifying the wrong product can stall a project at inspection.
This guide covers what NFPA 701 actually tests, how inherently flame retardant (IFR) fabrics differ from treated alternatives, and what your team needs to confirm before placing an order. Whether you are an FF&E specifier, a project manager coordinating a hotel renovation, or a purchasing lead validating vendor compliance, the goal is the same: get fire-retardant curtains right the first time.

Why fire retardancy matters for hospitality and commercial projects
Fire-retardant compliance for soft furnishings is required by building code in most US jurisdictions. The International Building Code (IBC) references NFPA 701 for draperies and curtains in commercial and assembly occupancies, including hotels, conference centers, theaters, schools, and healthcare environments.
This is not a recommendation. It is enforced at inspection.
A fire marshal reviewing a hotel renovation or new-build project will expect documentation proving that every hanging textile (curtains, drapery, and room dividers) meets the applicable flame propagation standard. If the documentation is missing, incomplete, or does not match the installed fabric, the project can fail inspection after installation is already complete.
The consequences extend beyond project delays:
- Liability exposure increases if non-compliant materials are installed in occupied spaces
- Insurance requirements often reference fire code compliance for commercial soft furnishings
- Replacement costs compound when curtains must be removed and re-sourced after a failed inspection
- Project timelines slip when specification errors surface late in the installation phase
For hospitality and commercial projects, fire retardancy is a specification decision that belongs early in the procurement process, not an afterthought during punch list review.

Understanding NFPA 701: what it tests and what it means
NFPA 701 is a test standard published by the National Fire Protection Association. It defines the methods used to evaluate how hanging textiles, fire-rated drapery, and films respond to flame exposure. It is not a product rating or a material classification. A fabric either passes the NFPA 701 test, or it does not.
The standard includes two test methods:
Method 1 (small-scale test)
Method 1 applies to individual fabrics and is the most commonly referenced test for curtains and drapery. A fabric sample is exposed to a controlled flame for 12 seconds. The test then measures:
- After-flame time — how long the fabric continues to burn after the flame source is removed
- Char length — the length of fabric destroyed by the flame
- Flaming residue — whether burning debris falls from the fabric during the test
To pass, the fabric must self-extinguish quickly, produce minimal char, and generate no flaming droplets.
Method 2 (large-scale test)
Method 2 applies to fabric assemblies, including layered or folded configurations that more closely resemble installed drapery. This test is relevant when curtains include multiple fabric layers, heavy pleating, or are installed in configurations where the small-scale test alone may not reflect real-world fire behavior.
What certification documentation looks like
When a fabric passes NFPA 701, the test results are documented in a report issued by an accredited third-party testing laboratory. Common accredited labs include SGS, Intertek, and UL.
A valid NFPA 701 certificate should specify:
- The exact fabric tested (fiber content, weight, construction)
- The test method used (Method 1, Method 2, or both)
- The test results and pass/fail determination
- The laboratory name and accreditation
This distinction matters: a supplier stating that their curtains are "fire retardant" is not the same as providing a third-party NFPA 701 test report. For commercial projects, the documentation is the proof.

IFR vs treated FR: which type suits your project
Not all fire-retardant curtains achieve their flame resistance the same way, and for projects specifying flame retardant hospitality fabrics, the distinction matters. The distinction between inherently flame retardant (IFR) and treated (topical) FR fabrics has direct implications for durability, maintenance, and long-term compliance.
Inherently flame retardant (IFR) fabrics
IFR fabrics are made from fibers that are non-combustible by composition. The fire retardancy is built into the yarn itself during manufacturing, not applied as a surface treatment. This means:
- Fire retardancy is permanent for the life of the fabric
- Performance does not degrade after washing or dry cleaning
- No re-treatment or re-testing is required after cleaning cycles
- The fabric maintains compliance regardless of how many times it is laundered
For hotel projects where curtains are cleaned frequently — guest room curtains in particular, IFR is the more reliable and cost-effective long-term choice.
Treated (topical) FR fabrics
Treated FR fabrics start as standard textiles and receive a chemical fire-retardant coating after manufacturing. This approach can be effective, but it introduces limitations:
- The treatment can degrade over time, especially with repeated washing
- Re-testing or re-treatment may be required after a set number of wash cycles
- The original NFPA 701 certificate may no longer apply after the treatment diminishes
- Some local fire codes require documentation that treated fabrics have been re-tested
Treated FR fabrics may be acceptable for short-term installations, event use, or environments where laundering is infrequent. For permanent hospitality installations, IFR fabrics reduce long-term compliance risk.
If your project requires fire-retardant curtains that will be washed regularly over a multi-year lifecycle, confirm whether the fabric is IFR or treated before finalizing your specification. This is a question worth resolving early, not after the curtains are installed.
Book a meeting to discuss fire-retardant options for your project.
When you need both blackout and fire retardancy
Hotel guest rooms are the most common scenario where blackout performance and fire-retardant compliance must coexist in the same curtain. Guests expect full light control. Code requires flame resistance. The curtain specification must satisfy both.
This creates a practical question: how does layered curtain construction affect NFPA 701 compliance?
Face fabric and lining as separate components
Many hospitality curtains use a face fabric paired with a separate blackout lining. When this is the case, each component may need to independently pass NFPA 701, or the assembled curtain must be tested as a complete unit.
Before ordering, confirm with your supplier:
- Whether the face fabric has its own NFPA 701 certificate
- Whether the blackout lining has its own NFPA 701 certificate
- If neither component is individually certified, whether the assembled curtain has been tested and certified as a unit
TheHues can discuss fire-retardant curtain options alongside blackout requirements as part of a custom project workflow. The curtain liner guide provides additional detail on lining options and their performance characteristics.
Fire-retardant blackout curtains for other commercial spaces
The blackout-plus-FR requirement is not limited to hotels. Theaters, conference rooms, presentation spaces, and healthcare environments frequently need curtains that block light while meeting fire code. In these cases, the same specification logic applies: confirm that every textile layer in the curtain assembly is covered by NFPA 701 testing.

Specifying fire-retardant curtains for your project
Getting fire-retardant curtain specification right requires confirming several details before placing an order. The earlier these are resolved, the less likely the project is to encounter compliance issues at installation or inspection.
1. Confirm the applicable standard
NFPA 701 is the baseline for most US jurisdictions, but some states and municipalities add requirements. California, New York, and Boston are among the jurisdictions with specific fire code provisions that may exceed the IBC baseline. Confirm with your local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) which standard applies to your project.
2. Request third-party test certificates
Do not rely on supplier statements alone. Request the actual NFPA 701 test report from an accredited laboratory. Verify that the report is current and corresponds to the specific fabric you intend to order.
3. Match the certificate to the product
An NFPA 701 certificate applies to a specific fabric, defined by fiber content, weight, weave, and construction. If the fabric you order differs from the fabric that was tested, the certificate may not apply. Confirm that the test report matches your procurement sample.
4. Clarify Method 1 vs Method 2
Most individual curtain fabrics are tested under Method 1. If your project involves heavy pleating, layered assemblies, or large-format installations, confirm whether Method 2 testing is also required.
5. Plan for lead time
Custom fire-retardant curtains require fabrication time. If your project has a tight installation window, factor in the lead time for both curtain production and certification verification. Production schedules vary with fabric selection, order volume, sampling, and approval workflow, and project-side compliance review should also be accounted for.
6. Keep documentation accessible
Fire marshal inspections can happen at any point during or after installation. Maintain NFPA 701 test reports on-site or in the project file so they are available when needed. This is especially important for hotel renovations where phased installations may be inspected at different stages.
Frequently asked questions
Is NFPA 701 certification mandatory for hotel curtains?
In most US jurisdictions, yes. The International Building Code references NFPA 701 for flame propagation testing of draperies in commercial and assembly occupancies. Individual states and cities may impose additional requirements. Confirm with your local authority having jurisdiction before finalizing specifications.
What is the difference between fire retardant and fireproof?
Fire-retardant curtains resist ignition and slow the spread of flame. They are not fireproof. No hanging textile is completely immune to fire. The purpose of fire-retardant certification is to limit flame propagation and reduce the risk of rapid fire spread, not to make the material indestructible.
How do I verify that curtains are genuinely NFPA 701 certified?
Request the test report from an accredited third-party laboratory such as SGS, Intertek, or UL. Confirm that the report identifies the specific fabric by fiber content, weight, and construction, and that the report is current. A supplier's general claim of "fire retardant" is not a substitute for a third-party test certificate.
Can I spray existing curtains with FR treatment instead of replacing them?
FR sprays provide temporary flame resistance and are generally not accepted as a substitute for certified FR fabric in permanent commercial installations. They may be acceptable for short-term event use or temporary applications, but most fire marshals will not accept spray-treated curtains as compliant for permanent occupancy.
Do both the face fabric and lining need to be fire retardant?
If your curtains use a separate lining, each component must meet NFPA 701 independently, or the assembled curtain must be tested and certified as a complete unit. Do not assume that a fire-retardant face fabric automatically makes the full curtain compliant.
How often do fire-retardant curtains need to be re-tested?
IFR fabrics maintain their fire retardancy permanently and do not require re-testing after cleaning. Treated FR fabrics may lose their flame resistance over time, especially after repeated washing, and may need periodic re-testing. Check your local fire code for re-certification intervals.
Next steps
If your hospitality or commercial project requires fire-retardant curtains, the specification process starts with confirming the standard, the fabric type, and the certification documentation. Through the TheHues trade program, project teams can discuss custom curtain options, blackout requirements, and the compliance documents available for the proposed construction.
Discuss your project with TheHues to confirm fire-retardant options, blackout requirements, and certification documentation for your next project.
Ready to get started? Create your trade account to access trade pricing and project support.