Fire Extinguisher Selector Tool — What Type Do I Need?

Choosing the wrong type of fire extinguisher can make a fire worse, not better. Different fire types — burning wood, cooking oil, flammable liquids, electrical equipment — each require a specific extinguisher. This tool gives you an instant recommendation based on where the extinguisher will be used.

Select your environment below to see the recommended type, size, placement rules and relevant Australian Standard.

Where will the fire extinguisher be used?

Recommendation for: Home or apartment

ABE Dry Powder — 2.5kg

Extinguisher typeABE Dry Powder
Recommended size2.5kg (1kg minimum)
Fire classes coveredClass A (combustibles), Class B (flammable liquids), Class E (electrical)
Australian StandardAS/NZS 1841 compliant

ABE powder covers the three most common home fire types — burning furniture, bedding or curtains (Class A), petrol or solvent spills in the garage (Class B), and electrical fires from appliances and wiring (Class E). A 2.5kg unit gives you approximately 14–15 seconds of discharge time versus 8–10 seconds for a 1kg — a meaningful difference in a real fire. Mount near the exit of the kitchen or living area, not next to the cooktop (heat and grease damage the extinguisher over time).

For kitchen cooking oil fires (Class F), add a fire blanket near the cooktop. A powder extinguisher should not be used on a burning pan of oil — the pressure spreads the fire.

Recommendation for: Domestic kitchen

ABE Dry Powder — 2.5kg + Fire Blanket

Extinguisher typeABE Dry Powder
Recommended size2.5kg
Fire classes coveredClass A (combustibles), Class B (flammable liquids), Class E (electrical)
Australian StandardAS/NZS 1841 compliant

For a domestic kitchen, a 2.5kg ABE extinguisher paired with a fire blanket covers the full range of home fire risks. The fire blanket is your first response for a cooking oil or pan fire — place it over the pan, turn off the heat, and leave it for at least 30 minutes. It smothers the fire without the risk of spreading hot oil. The ABE extinguisher handles everything else: burning curtains or fittings (Class A), a gas hob leak (Class B), or an electrical appliance fire (Class E). Mounting the extinguisher near the kitchen exit — not directly beside the cooktop — means you can reach it safely even if a fire starts at the stove.

Never discharge a powder extinguisher directly onto a burning pan of oil. The pressure can throw burning liquid outward and spread the fire. Use the fire blanket first for any cooking fire.

Recommendation for: Office or retail

ABE Dry Powder — 2.5kg (minimum)

Extinguisher typeABE Dry Powder
Recommended size2.5kg minimum; check AS 2444 for your floor area
Fire classes coveredClass A (paper, furniture, fittings), Class B (flammable liquids), Class E (electrical)
Placement rule (AS 2444)Max 15m travel distance to extinguisher; mount 100mm–1200mm from floor; signage at 2000mm

Office and retail fires most commonly involve Class A materials (paper, cardboard, furniture, fittings) and Class E electrical fires (computers, servers, wiring). ABE powder covers both. Under AS 2444, the maximum travel distance to any extinguisher in a workplace is 15 metres. For a server room, electrical switchboard or data room, consider CO2 instead — it leaves no residue and won’t damage equipment.

WHS Regulations 2017 require all workplaces to have an emergency plan that includes fire equipment. See our Workplace Fire Extinguisher Requirements guide for full AS 2444 placement rules and AS 1851 maintenance requirements.

Recommendation for: Workshop, garage or warehouse

ABE Dry Powder — 2.5kg or larger

Extinguisher typeABE Dry Powder
Recommended size2.5kg minimum; 4.5–9kg for larger spaces or high-risk areas
Fire classes coveredClass A (timber, rags, cardboard), Class B (petrol, diesel, oils, solvents, paints), Class E (electrical tools and equipment)
Placement rule (AS 2444)Max 15m travel distance; position near exits and at high-risk points (refuelling areas, chemical storage)

Workshops, garages and warehouses typically present Class B risks (petrol, diesel, solvents, paints) alongside Class A and electrical hazards. ABE powder is the standard choice because it covers all three. For areas with significant flammable liquid storage, position extinguishers at entry points and near each hazard source — not directly next to the hazard, where a fire would block access.

Under WHS Regulations 2017, workplaces with significant Class B hazards should have a documented emergency plan that identifies fire risks and the location of all fire equipment.

Recommendation for: Vehicle, caravan or boat

ABE Dry Powder — 1kg (minimum) or 2.5kg (recommended)

Extinguisher typeABE Dry Powder
Legal minimum1kg (CIAA Code of Practice for caravans); motorhomes: min 5B rating under ADR 44/01
Fire classes coveredClass A (upholstery, fittings), Class B (petrol, diesel, LPG), Class E (12V and 240V electrical)
Mounting requirementSecure bracket rated to withstand towing/braking forces (AS 2444); living space, max 1.2m from floor

A fire in a vehicle, caravan or boat escalates fast — there is no time to find an extinguisher you can’t immediately reach. The bracket is as important as the extinguisher: an unsecured unit becomes a projectile under heavy braking. ADR 44/01 requires motorhome extinguishers to be mounted in the living space, no higher than 1.2 metres from the floor, in a readily visible and accessible position. A 2.5kg unit gives roughly double the discharge time of a 1kg and is the recommended choice for larger caravans and motorhomes where space allows.

See our Caravan & Camping Fire Safety Guide for gas safety rules, QLD smoke alarm requirements and total fire ban obligations.

Recommendation for: Commercial kitchen or restaurant

Wet Chemical (primary) + ABE Dry Powder (secondary)

Primary typeWet Chemical — for deep fryers, woks, range fires (Class F)
Secondary typeABE Dry Powder — covers Class A (combustibles), Class B (flammable liquids), Class E (electrical)
Fire classes coveredClass F + Class A + Class B + Class E
StandardAS 2444 placement; AS 1851 maintenance (6-monthly service in commercial kitchens)

Commercial kitchens need a wet chemical extinguisher near the cooking line as the primary unit — it is the only type rated for Class F cooking oil fires. A secondary ABE dry powder extinguisher covers the broader kitchen environment: Class A fires (rubbish, cardboard, timber), Class B (flammable liquids), and Class E (electrical equipment). ABE covers more fire types than CO2, making it the better general-purpose secondary choice. Be aware that ABE powder is messy and will contaminate food and equipment — for kitchens with high-value food stock, consider adding a CO2 extinguisher as a complement to reduce contamination risk where appropriate.

If your kitchen already has a sprinkler system or hose reel: these installations cover Class A fires, so a CO2 extinguisher alone may be sufficient as your secondary unit — check with a licensed fire protection technician.

Commercial kitchens are workplaces under the WHS Act 2011. AS 1851 requires 6-monthly inspection and annual service by a licensed technician. A licensed fire protection company should assess the full fit-out for your specific building class and council requirements.

Quick Reference: Fire Classes and Extinguisher Types

Fire classWhat it involvesCorrect extinguisher
Class AWood, paper, fabric, plastics, most combustiblesWater, foam, ABE powder, wet chemical
Class BFlammable liquids — petrol, diesel, oils, paints, solventsFoam, ABE powder, CO2
Class CFlammable gases — LPG, natural gas, acetyleneABE powder (shut off gas supply first)
Class EElectrical equipment — appliances, wiring, switchboardsCO2, ABE powder (not water or foam)
Class FCooking oils and fats (deep fryers, woks)Wet chemical only
Still not sure? Browse the full range of fire extinguishers — each product listing includes the fire classes covered, the AS/NZS 1841 rating, and the recommended use cases. Or see our Workplace Requirements guide for AS 2444 placement rules and Caravan Fire Safety guide for vehicle use.

Sources: AS 2444-1985 — Portable fire extinguishers and fire blankets: selection and location; AS 1851-2012 — Maintenance of fire protection systems and equipment; Vehicle Standard (Australian Design Rule 44/01); Caravan Industry Association of Australia Code of Practice; WHS Regulations 2017, Part 3.1. Sourced via live web search 2026-06-24.

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