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Written by Shawn Lee
Shawn Lee is a U.S. Air Force veteran with nearly 27 years of service and serves as Fire Alarm Program Director and lead fire alarm instructor at Fire Tech Productions.
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If you’ve spent any time around fire alarm systems, you know the battery calculation is one of those things that’s easy to overlook until it becomes a problem — usually at final inspection, or worse, during an actual power outage. Let’s walk through the why, the when, and the how so you’re walking into every project with confidence.

Throughout this post, we’ll be working from NFPA 72-2022 and comparing it against the 2019 edition — specifically where the correction factor changed between the two. The principles and the calculation process apply regardless of which edition you’re working from, but the specific requirements do vary between editions. Before you put pencil to paper on any project, confirm which edition of NFPA 72 has been adopted in the jurisdiction you’re working in. Your AHJ is the authority on that question, and designing to the wrong edition is just as problematic as getting the math wrong.

Why Battery Calculations Matter

A fire alarm system’s secondary power supply — typically sealed lead-acid, now referred to as valve-regulated lead-acid (VRLA) batteries — is your last line of defense when utility power fails. NFPA 72 doesn’t just suggest you have batteries; it mandates that those batteries carry the system through specific operational scenarios without utility power.

The calculation isn’t bureaucratic box-checking. It’s answering a real question: If the power goes out right now, can this system do its job long enough to notify the occupants and summon emergency services? Done correctly, the calculation tells you exactly what battery capacity you need. Done wrong, you either have an undersized system that fails under load or an oversized one that wastes the client’s money.

When You Need to Do the Calculation

Any time you’re designing a new system, expanding an existing one, or replacing batteries, you need to revisit the calculation. Adding notification appliances, changing the control panel, or upgrading to a larger system all affect the load — and therefore the required battery capacity.

Don’t assume the previous designer got it right, either. Audit the calculation when you take over an existing system project. It’s one of the first things a sharp AHJ will ask about.

The NFPA 72 2022 Framework — Know Your System Type First

Before you run a single number, you need to identify what type of system you’re designing. Section 10.6.7.2 of NFPA 72-2022 sets different secondary power capacity requirements depending on system function, and using the wrong scenario will produce the wrong answer.

Section 10.6.7.2 covers a range of system types and configurations — more than we’ll address in a single post. Here are the scenarios you’re most likely to encounter in the field:

  • Standard protected premises fire alarm systems — the most common calculation you’ll perform. Per 10.6.7.2.1, the secondary power supply must support the system under quiescent load (normal supervisory, non-alarm condition) for a minimum of 24 hours. Per 10.6.7.2.2, at the end of that 24-hour period, the system must still be capable of operating all alarm notification appliances used for evacuation or to direct aid to an emergency location for a minimum of 5 minutes.
  • In-building fire emergency voice/alarm communications (EVAC) systems — per 10.6.7.2.3 and 10.6.7.2.4, the same 24-hour quiescent requirement applies, but the alarm operation period extends to 15 minutes at maximum connected load. If you’re designing a voice evacuation system and you’re calculating for 5 minutes of alarm, you’re already out of compliance.
  • Supervising station facilities — per 10.6.7.2.5, a minimum of 24 hours of operational support is required.
  • Communications equipment transmitting to a supervising station — per 10.6.7.2.11 and 10.6.7.2.12, 24 hours of quiescent load followed by 5 minutes capable of transmitting signals.

For this walkthrough, we’ll focus on the standard protected premises scenario under 10.6.7.2.1 and 10.6.7.2.2 — 24 hours standby, 5 minutes alarm — since that’s what most designers encounter day-to-day.

The Calculation Itself

You’re solving for ampere-hour (Ah) capacity — how much battery capacity your system requires. Here’s the step-by-step:

Step 1 — Determine your standby current draw.

Add up the current draw of every device and circuit on the system during normal supervisory operation: the control panel in standby mode, all initiating devices, supervisory modules, and anything else that draws current when the system is sitting idle. Your panel manufacturer’s documentation will list standby current for the panel. Device data sheets (also called cut sheets) give you the rest. Keep in mind that the data sheet gives you the current draw for a single device. You’ll need to multiply that value by the number of devices of each type on the system to get the total current contribution for that device category. Do this for every device type on the system, then sum the results to arrive at your total standby current draw.

Step 2 — Determine your alarm current draw.

Now calculate the full-load current during alarm: notification appliance circuits at maximum load, the panel in alarm mode, any relays or auxiliary functions that activate on alarm. This is almost always your largest current draw, and it’s the one designers most frequently underestimate by forgetting devices or circuits. The same multiplication applies here — take the alarm current draw for each device type from the data sheet and multiply by the quantity of that device on the system. Account for every notification appliance circuit at full load, and don’t overlook devices that may only activate during alarm that weren’t part of your standby calculation.

Step 3 — Calculate raw capacity needed.

  • Standby Ah = Standby current (A) × 24 hours
  • Alarm Ah = Alarm current (A) × alarm time in hours

Convert alarm time from minutes to hours by dividing by 60:

  • Standard system: 5 minutes ÷ 60 = 0833 hours
  • Voice/EVAC system: 15 minutes ÷ 60 = 25 hours
  • Total raw Ah = Standby Ah + Alarm Ah

Step 4 — Apply the correction factor.

This is where NFPA 72-2022 made a meaningful change that every designer needs to know about.

Per 10.6.7.2.14, battery calculations shall apply a correction factor of 1.25 for aging to ensure the battery can meet its current demand at the end of its service life.

Required Battery Capacity = (Standby Ah + Alarm Ah) × 1.25

Round up to the next available standard battery size. Never round down.

One important check before you finalize your battery size: control panels have a maximum battery capacity they are rated to charge, and that limit varies by manufacturer and model. Always consult the manufacturer’s published installation instructions to confirm the panel can support your calculated battery size. If your required battery capacity exceeds the panel’s rated charging capacity, an auxiliary battery charger listed for use with the control panel will be required to charge the batteries.

Why 1.25? The Science Behind the Number

That asterisk on 10.6.7.2.14 points to Annex A, and the explanation there is worth understanding — not just for the exam, but because it makes you a better designer.

VRLA batteries degrade over time. By the end of their service life, a VRLA battery’s rated capacity will have decreased to approximately 80 percent of its original rating. The 1.25 correction factor directly addresses that reality: 1 ÷ 0.80 = 1.25. You’re not padding the number arbitrarily — you’re sizing the battery so that even at end-of-life capacity, it can still meet the system’s full demand.

There’s another wrinkle worth knowing: a brand-new VRLA battery may initially deliver only about 90 percent of its rated capacity. It typically takes several deep discharge/charge cycles — or a few weeks on float charge — before it reaches full rated capacity. That’s not a defect; it’s just how lead-acid chemistry behaves.

Temperature matters too. VRLA battery capacity changes with operating temperature, and if your batteries are going into an environment outside their nominal temperature range — a cold stairwell, a hot mechanical room — your calculation should account for that. Annex A.10.6.7.2.14 points to IEEE 485, Recommended Practice for Sizing Lead-Acid Batteries for Stationary Applications, for detailed guidance on temperature correction. That’s a solid reference to have on your shelf if you regularly design systems in challenging environments.

One more note from the annex: different battery technologies require different correction factors. The 1.25 figure is specifically grounded in lead-acid aging behavior. If you’re working with a lithium-based secondary power supply, verify the applicable correction factor for that technology — don’t assume 1.25 carries over automatically.

The 2019 vs. 2022 Change: A Small Number with Big Consequences

In NFPA 72-2019, the correction factor was 1.2. The 2022 edition increased it to 1.25. On paper it looks minor. In practice, it can bump you into the next standard battery size — and that’s exactly the scenario you want to catch at your desk, not at inspection.

Here’s an example designed to show exactly where that line gets crossed. Say your system has a standby current of 0.400 A and an alarm current of 2.400 A:

  • Standby Ah: 0.400 × 24 = 6 Ah
  • Alarm Ah: 2.400 × 0.0833 = 200 Ah
  • Total raw: 8 Ah
  • With the 2019 correction factor: 9.8 × 1.20 = 76 Ah → a 12 Ah battery meets the requirement
  • With the 2022 correction factor: 9.8 × 1.25 = 25 Ah → 12 Ah no longer sufficient → must specify an 18 Ah battery

Now let’s put this in context. Suppose the jurisdiction you’re designing for has adopted the 2022 edition of NFPA 72. Same system load. Same hardware. Different edition of the code — and you’re now one battery size up. If you submitted that design using a 2019-era template without verifying the correction factor against the adopted edition, it fails under the 2022 requirements.

That’s why staying current on code editions isn’t just a compliance formality. The numbers change, and sometimes they change in ways that affect your material costs and your submittal.

Also worth noting: per 10.6.7.2.13, your calculation must include all power supply loads that are not automatically disconnected upon transfer to secondary power. If something stays live on battery that you didn’t account for, your Ah requirement goes up accordingly.

Tools: Spreadsheets Are Helpful, But Understanding Is Essential

Many major control panel manufacturers — including several of the most widely used panel brands — offer battery calculation spreadsheets or software tools tied to their specific product lines. Check the technical support or documentation section of your panel manufacturer’s website for available resources. These are genuinely useful tools and worth having in your workflow.

But here’s the mentorship moment: a spreadsheet you don’t understand is a liability. Those tools are only as good as the data you put into them, and if you don’t understand why the formula works, you won’t catch it when the inputs are wrong — or when the sheet was built against the 2019 code and still uses 1.2 instead of 1.25.

You can also build your own. It doesn’t need to be elaborate — a clean layout with columns for device description, standby current, and alarm current, with a formula that sums each column and multiplies by the appropriate correction factor, is all you need. Building it yourself once is one of the best ways to fully own the process.

Either way: do the calculation by hand at least a few times before you lean on any tool. Once you understand the logic, a spreadsheet becomes a genuine time-saver. And when the AHJ asks a follow-up question on-site, you can answer it without reaching for your laptop.

The Bottom Line

Battery calculations aren’t complicated, but they demand accuracy and current code knowledge. Section 10.6.7.2 of NFPA 72-2022 is your anchor — read from 10.6.7.2.1 through 10.6.7.2.14, identify the scenario that matches your system type, and build your calculation from there. The increase from 1.2 to 1.25 is a small number with real consequences, and understanding why it changed makes you a more confident, more credible designer.

Get the math right, and you’ll sleep better knowing your system will perform when the lights go out.

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