Business Fire Insurance Claims: A Complete Guide for Irish Businesses

6 min read

Aerial view of a fire-damaged commercial industrial unit insurance claim in Dublin
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A fire in your premises is one of the most distressing events a business owner can face. In the hours afterwards, you are dealing with shock, with staff and customers, and with a building that may no longer be safe to enter. The decisions you make in those first days can shape the outcome of your insurance claim for months to come. This guide explains how commercial fire insurance claims work in Ireland, what you are entitled to claim, and the costly mistakes that are easy to make when you are under pressure.

The First Steps After a Commercial Fire

Safety comes before everything else. Do not re-enter the building until the fire service confirms it is safe to do so. Fire-damaged structures can be unstable, and smoke residue, weakened floors and compromised electrics present real risks long after the flames are out.

Once you and your people are safe, there are a handful of practical steps that protect both your premises and your eventual claim.

  • Secure the premises. Board up broken windows and doors, and arrange temporary fencing or security if needed. Your policy usually requires you to prevent further loss, for example from weather or trespass.
  • Notify your insurer. Tell your insurer or broker promptly that a fire has occurred. Early notification is a condition of most commercial policies.
  • Keep all reports. Hold on to the fire brigade attendance details and any Garda report. These help establish the cause and timeline.
  • Document everything before you clear up. Photograph and video the damage widely before anything is moved, cleaned or thrown out.

What Not to Commit to Before Getting Advice

In the early days you may be asked to agree figures, sign forms, or accept a scope of works prepared by others. Be cautious. Do not agree a value for your loss, accept an early settlement offer, or sign off on a schedule of damage until you fully understand what your policy covers and what your loss actually amounts to. Once a figure is agreed, it can be very difficult to revisit, even when further damage comes to light. There is no obligation to settle quickly, and taking time to assess the full picture is almost always to your benefit.

The Full Scope of a Fire Claim

A fire claim is rarely just about the burnt walls. A properly prepared commercial fire damage claim accounts for every category of loss your policy responds to. The main heads of claim usually include:

  • Building and structure. Repair or rebuilding of the fabric of the premises, including roof, walls, floors and services.
  • Stock. Raw materials, work in progress and finished goods, whether destroyed outright or rendered unsaleable by smoke and water.
  • Contents and equipment. Machinery, tools, IT systems, furniture and fittings.
  • Fit-out. Tenant improvements, shopfronts, kitchens, bars, partitions and bespoke installations that are easy to undervalue.
  • Debris removal. The cost of clearing the site safely before any rebuilding can begin, often a substantial sum in its own right.

Each of these needs to be measured and evidenced. The completeness of this exercise is one of the biggest factors in the final settlement.

Hidden Damage You Cannot Afford to Miss

Some of the most significant fire damage is not visible at first glance. It sits behind surfaces, inside cavities and within equipment that still appears to work. If it is not identified and included, you may be left funding repairs that your policy should have covered.

  • Smoke and soot. Smoke travels far beyond the seat of the fire, settling in rooms that never burned. Soot is acidic and corrosive, and it can continue to damage surfaces, stock and electronics over time.
  • Water from firefighting. The water used to extinguish a fire can soak floors, ceilings and stock throughout the building, leading to staining, warping and, later, mould.
  • Heat stress. Intense heat can weaken structural elements, distort steel, crack masonry and compromise services without leaving obvious scorch marks.

Properly assessing hidden damage often requires specialist inspection. It is one of the clearest reasons to have technical expertise on your side of the claim from the outset.

Compliance Reinstatement Costs Are Claimable

When a damaged building is reinstated, it generally has to be rebuilt to the standards that apply today, not the standards that applied when it was first constructed. Building regulations and fire-safety requirements change over the years, and bringing a property back into use may mean upgrading fire compartmentation, escape routes, alarm and detection systems, electrical installations and more.

Many commercial policies include cover for these compliance, or upgrade, costs, yet they are among the most frequently overlooked elements of a fire claim. The additional expense of meeting current standards can be considerable, and it is easy to leave it out of a claim if you are not specifically looking for it. Reviewing your policy wording carefully to identify what compliance cover you hold is an important part of getting the claim right.

Business Interruption After a Fire

The cost of repairing your premises is only part of the story. While you cannot trade, or while you trade at reduced capacity, you continue to face overheads and lost income. This is what business interruption insurance is designed to address.

A business interruption claim typically looks at loss of gross profit, ongoing fixed costs such as wages and rent, and additional expenses you incur to keep trading, for example temporary premises or equipment hire. The figures depend on your accounts, your policy’s indemnity period, and how the disruption actually plays out. Hospitality and retail businesses are especially exposed here; if you run a restaurant, our guidance on the restaurant insurance claim process explains the sector-specific issues in more detail. Quantifying business interruption accurately takes careful financial analysis, and it is an area where claims are often understated.

How the Claim Is Managed End to End

When the insurer receives a claim, they appoint a loss adjuster to assess it on their behalf. That adjuster works for the insurer. A public loss assessor works for you, the policyholder, and manages the claim in your interest. The roles are structurally opposed: one is instructed by the party paying out, the other by the party claiming.

Managed properly, a fire claim moves through a clear sequence: a full site inspection and damage assessment; a detailed review of your policy to confirm what is covered; preparation and documentation of every head of loss, including hidden damage, compliance costs and business interruption; lodging the claim with supporting evidence; negotiating the scope and value with the insurer’s adjuster; and working toward the best possible settlement so you can rebuild and reopen. Throughout, the aim is to relieve you of the administrative burden so you can focus on your business and your people.

Commercial Insurance Claim Solutions is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland, Reg. No: C423441, and works on a no win, no fee basis. We act for the policyholder and prepare your claim in full so that nothing claimable is left on the table.

Talk to Us About Your Fire Claim

If your business has suffered fire damage, the sooner you have expert support, the better positioned your claim will be. We will visit your premises, review your policy, and explain your options with no obligation. Get a free claim assessment today and let us take the weight of the claim off your shoulders.

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Written and reviewed by · Last updated 24 June 2026

Written by
John Holland Building Surveyor
Senior Loss Assessor

John Holland is a qualified building surveyor and Senior Loss Assessor who leads the assessment and negotiation of major, technical and complex commercial losses, including fire, subsidence and business interruption claims. He specialises in the detailed technical analysis that high-value commercial claims demand, making sure every element of a loss is identified, quantified and properly presented to the insurer.

More about John Holland

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