Fire Safety at Home When You Live Alone

A working smoke alarm and a clear escape plan can save your life — but when you live alone, no one is there to wake you or call for help.

Roughly 75% of fire deaths occur in the home, and people living alone face greater risk because no one is there to raise the alarm.

The Challenge

Smoke alarms that need new batteries go untested for months when you live alone.

A blocked exit or missing escape plan turns a small fire into a fatal situation.

No one is monitoring your home — a fire can spread undetected for critical minutes.

How I'm Alive Helps

Test smoke alarms monthly and replace batteries every year — set a calendar reminder.

Create and rehearse a two-exit escape plan so you can leave in under 90 seconds.

Use I'm Alive check-ins so contacts are alerted if you miss a check-in after a home emergency.

Fire Prevention Basics for Solo Residents

Keep cooking areas clear of towels, paper, and grease. Never leave candles or the stovetop unattended, and turn appliances off at the wall when leaving home. Install interconnected smoke alarms in every bedroom, hallway, and living area. When one sounds, they all sound — critical when you are asleep and alone. Store a fire extinguisher (ABC-rated) near the kitchen. Know how to use it: Pull, Aim, Squeeze, Sweep.

Escape Planning and Staying Connected

Draw a floor plan of your home and identify two exit routes from every room. Practice walking both routes in the dark so muscle memory takes over in real smoke. Share your escape plan with a trusted contact. Agree on a meeting point outside so that person knows you got out safely. I'm Alive lets you trigger an emergency alert the moment you are safe outside, so your contacts and emergency services have accurate information fast.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I test smoke alarms?

Test every alarm monthly by pressing the test button. Replace batteries annually and replace the entire unit every 10 years.

What is the most common cause of home fires?

Unattended cooking is the leading cause. Keep the stovetop clear and never leave food frying unattended.

Should I try to fight a fire myself?

Only attempt to fight a fire if it is very small (contained to one item), you have a clear exit behind you, and you have a suitable extinguisher. Otherwise, get out immediately.

Where should I install carbon monoxide detectors?

Install CO detectors on every floor and within 10 feet of each sleeping area. CO is invisible and odourless — detectors are your only warning.

How does I'm Alive help in a fire emergency?

If you miss a scheduled check-in after a fire or any emergency, I'm Alive notifies your trusted contacts immediately so help can be sent to your home.

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