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If there is one category that causes easy failures in Baltimore City rental inspections, it is alarms. Not because the rules are impossible, but because owners get busy and miss simple details like placement, testing, and old units that should have been replaced.
This guide covers what inspectors look for, how Baltimore City expects alarms to be installed and operational, and what I recommend landlords do to avoid a failed inspection over a ten minute fix.
For the full rental inspection checklist, read:
Baltimore City Rental License Inspection Checklist.
Baltimore City rental inspections check that smoke alarms are properly installed and operational, and that carbon monoxide alarms are properly installed and operational when applicable. Baltimore City Rental License Inspection Form PDF
The City also publishes inspector guidance that explains carbon monoxide alarms are required when there is fossil fuel burning equipment, appliances, fireplaces, wood stoves, or an attached garage. It also describes placement outside sleeping areas in the immediate vicinity and on every occupiable level including basements. The same guidance notes smoke alarms older than 10 years should be replaced. Inspector Guidance Document PDF
If you want to avoid failures, replace questionable alarms, test everything, and confirm placement before inspection day.
On the Baltimore City inspection form, alarm checks appear as two separate items:
1. Smoke detectors properly installed and operational
2. Carbon monoxide alarms properly installed and operational when applicable
Those are direct checklist items. If they are not right, you can fail the inspection.
The City guidance notes requirements vary based on construction or rehabilitation year, and it includes rule references and a summary table. In real life, most failures come from three simple issues:
1. Missing alarms where one should be present
2. Dead alarms, missing batteries, or units that do not respond to testing
3. Old alarms that should be replaced
The inspector guidance notes smoke alarms older than 10 years should be replaced.
Practical advice:
If you do not know the age, replace it. It is cheaper than losing time on a reinspection.
This is the part that trips up owners.
The City guidance states carbon monoxide alarms are required when there is fossil fuel burning equipment, appliances, fireplaces, wood stoves, or an attached garage.
Examples that usually mean you need carbon monoxide alarms:
1. Gas furnace or boiler
2. Gas water heater
3. Gas stove or range
4. Fireplace
5. Attached garage
If any of those apply, plan to install carbon monoxide alarms.
The City guidance describes placement in two ways:
1. Outside sleeping areas in the immediate vicinity
2. On every occupiable level including basements
That is the simplest way to think about it.
Practical walkthrough:
1. Put a unit outside bedrooms
2. Put a unit on each level people can occupy
3. Test them, then document the date you replaced them
Here are the mistakes I see most often.
Putting alarms in the wrong place
Owners sometimes place carbon monoxide alarms only in the basement near the furnace. That is not enough if there are sleeping areas on upper floors.
Follow the guidance placement language, and you avoid this issue.
Leaving old units in place
Smoke alarms older than 10 years should be replaced per the City guidance. If a unit looks old, replace it before inspection.
Not testing alarms before inspection day
If you test alarms the day before, you have time to fix a dead unit. If you test while the inspector is there, it is too late.
Use this before every inspection, especially tenant occupied units.
1. Walk every level and identify sleeping areas
2. Confirm smoke alarms are present and functional
3. Confirm carbon monoxide alarms are present when applicable
4. Press the test button on every alarm
5. Replace any unit that is dead, chirping, or clearly old
6. Confirm carbon monoxide alarms are outside sleeping areas and on each occupiable level including basements
7. Write down replacement dates for your own records
If a tenant removes batteries, it becomes a cycle.
What works:
1. Tell tenants you will test alarms during the inspection prep window
2. Replace old alarms rather than swapping batteries repeatedly
3. Confirm alarms are in place at turnover, then recheck before licensing inspections
Also remember that Baltimore City law requires inspection reports used for licensing to be distributed to residents when the application is submitted. If you are working in tenant occupied units, keep your communication process organized.
The City guidance ties the requirement to fossil fuel burning equipment, appliances, fireplaces, wood stoves, or an attached garage. If none of those apply, the requirement may not apply.
The City inspector guidance notes smoke alarms older than 10 years should be replaced.
The City guidance describes placement outside sleeping areas in the immediate vicinity and on every occupiable level including basements.
Alarms are a big part of passing, but the inspection includes other safety and habitability items.
If you want your property ready for inspection without the last minute scramble, we can help.
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