A fire suppression system is one of those expenses no business owner gets excited about — until a fire breaks out next door and suddenly it is the best money you ever spent. If you own or manage a commercial property in New Jersey, you need to know what these systems cost, which type fits your building, and when NJ fire code requires one. This guide covers all of it — real numbers, no fluff.
At Security Dynamics Inc., we have been designing, installing, and servicing fire protection systems across New Jersey for over 41 years. We hold NJ Fire Alarm License #P00747 and work with every major fire suppression system type. This guide is built from actual project costs and real-world NJ installations — not national averages pulled from a database.
Fire Suppression System Cost by System Type
The single biggest factor in your cost is the type of fire suppression system your building needs. Each system uses different technology, different materials, and different installation complexity. Here is what each type costs in 2026:
Wet Sprinkler Systems: $2–$7 per Square Foot
Wet sprinkler systems are the most common commercial fire suppression systems in New Jersey. The pipes are always filled with pressurized water. When a sprinkler head detects heat (typically at 155°F–165°F), that individual head opens and water flows immediately. Only the heads in the fire area activate — the rest stay closed.
Cost range: $2–$7 per square foot installed. A 5,000 sq ft office typically runs $10,000–$35,000. A 20,000 sq ft warehouse is $40,000–$140,000. The wide range depends on ceiling height, pipe run complexity, water supply requirements, and whether the building is new construction or a retrofit.
Best for: offices, retail spaces, warehouses, schools, healthcare facilities — any heated space where pipes will not freeze.
Why it is the cheapest: Wet systems have the simplest design. Water sits in the pipes ready to go. No special valve systems, no pressurized gas, no complex detection panels. That simplicity translates directly to lower installation cost and lower annual maintenance cost.
Dry Sprinkler Systems: $3–$10 per Square Foot
Dry sprinkler systems use the same sprinkler heads as wet systems, but the pipes are filled with pressurized air or nitrogen instead of water. When a head activates, the air pressure drops, a dry pipe valve opens, and water floods into the pipes to the open head. There is a 30–60 second delay compared to wet systems.
Cost range: $3–$10 per square foot installed. Expect to pay 30–50% more than an equivalent wet system. The additional cost comes from the dry pipe valve assembly, air compressor, and more complex piping design to ensure proper drainage.
Best for: unheated warehouses, parking garages, loading docks, cold storage, outdoor canopies — any space where temperatures drop below 40°F and frozen pipes would be a problem.
NJ consideration: New Jersey winters make dry systems essential for unheated spaces. Frozen wet sprinkler pipes burst, causing massive water damage — often worse than a fire. If your building has unheated sections, those areas need dry system coverage.
Clean Agent Systems (FM-200): $15–$25 per Square Foot
FM-200 (heptafluoropropane) is a gas-based fire suppression agent that extinguishes fires by absorbing heat and interrupting the chemical chain reaction of combustion. It leaves no residue, does not damage electronics, and dissipates quickly. The system stores FM-200 in pressurized cylinders and discharges through ceiling-mounted nozzles when a detection system confirms a fire.
Cost range: $15–$25 per square foot for the protected area. A 500 sq ft server room runs $7,500–$12,500. A 2,000 sq ft data center is $30,000–$50,000. Costs include the agent cylinders, distribution piping, nozzles, detection system, control panel, and installation.
Best for: server rooms, data centers, telecommunications facilities, museums, archives, medical imaging rooms — spaces with sensitive electronics or irreplaceable assets where water damage would be catastrophic.
Why it costs more: The FM-200 agent itself is expensive (roughly $65–$100 per pound), the system requires sealed room integrity to maintain proper agent concentration, and the detection and release mechanism is more sophisticated than a standard sprinkler system. You are also paying for dual-detection (usually smoke + heat) to prevent false discharges that would waste the expensive agent.
Clean Agent Systems (Novec 1230): $20–$30 per Square Foot
Novec 1230 (manufactured by 3M) is the newest generation of clean agent fire suppression. It works similarly to FM-200 but has a significantly lower global warming potential (GWP of 1 versus FM-200’s GWP of 3,220). Novec 1230 is stored as a liquid, transitions to gas when discharged, leaves zero residue, and is safe for occupied spaces.
Cost range: $20–$30 per square foot for the protected area. A 500 sq ft server room runs $10,000–$15,000. A 2,000 sq ft data center is $40,000–$60,000. The premium over FM-200 reflects the higher agent cost and newer technology.
Best for: same applications as FM-200, plus organizations with environmental sustainability requirements or those anticipating future regulation of high-GWP agents. Novec 1230 is increasingly specified in new construction and by clients with ESG commitments.
FM-200 vs. Novec 1230: Both protect electronics equally well. Novec 1230 costs 20–30% more upfront but carries lower environmental liability. If you are building new, we typically recommend Novec 1230. If you are maintaining an existing FM-200 system, there is no immediate need to switch — FM-200 remains effective and code-compliant.
Pre-Action Sprinkler Systems: $5–$12 per Square Foot
Pre-action systems are a hybrid between dry and wet systems. Pipes start empty (like dry systems), but water does not enter until an independent detection system confirms a fire. This two-step activation prevents accidental water discharge from a broken pipe or damaged sprinkler head — a critical feature for spaces where water damage is a concern.
Cost range: $5–$12 per square foot installed. The additional cost over wet systems comes from the detection panel, pre-action valve, and the dual-trigger logic. Pre-action systems also require more engineering design time because the detection system and sprinkler system must be coordinated.
Best for: data centers that need both sprinkler coverage (for code compliance) and water damage protection, museums, cold storage facilities, and spaces where a single false discharge would cause significant financial loss.
Kitchen Hood Suppression Systems: $3,000–$10,000
Commercial kitchen hood fire suppression systems are self-contained units that protect cooking equipment, hoods, and ductwork. They use wet chemical agents (typically potassium carbonate) specifically designed to suppress grease fires (Class K). The systems are tied into the gas shutoff so fuel is automatically cut when the system activates.
Cost range: $3,000–$10,000 per system, depending on the size of the hood and the number of appliances protected. A small restaurant with one 8-foot hood is on the lower end. A large commercial kitchen with multiple hoods, fryers, and grills is on the upper end. Cost includes the chemical tank, nozzles, detection links, gas shutoff integration, and installation.
Best for: restaurants, commercial kitchens, food trucks, cafeterias, hotel kitchens — any commercial cooking operation. These are required by NJ fire code in all commercial kitchens. No exceptions.
Critical note: Kitchen hood systems require semi-annual inspection (every 6 months) per NFPA 96 and NJ fire code. Budget $200–$500 per inspection. Missing an inspection can result in fines and insurance policy voidance.
Cost Comparison Table by System Type
| System Type | Cost Per Sq Ft | 5,000 Sq Ft Example | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wet Sprinkler | $2–$7 | $10,000–$35,000 | Offices, retail, heated warehouses |
| Dry Sprinkler | $3–$10 | $15,000–$50,000 | Unheated spaces, parking, cold storage |
| Clean Agent (FM-200) | $15–$25 | $75,000–$125,000 | Server rooms, data centers, archives |
| Clean Agent (Novec 1230) | $20–$30 | $100,000–$150,000 | Data centers, environmentally conscious orgs |
| Pre-Action | $5–$12 | $25,000–$60,000 | Data centers, museums, cold storage |
| Kitchen Hood | $3,000–$10,000 per system | N/A (per hood, not sq ft) | Restaurants, commercial kitchens |
Fire Suppression Cost by Building Type
System type is the biggest cost driver, but building type determines which system you need and how complex the installation will be. Here is what NJ businesses typically pay:
Office Buildings
Typical system: Wet sprinkler throughout, with clean agent or pre-action in server/IT rooms.
Cost range: $2–$5 per square foot for the general office area. Add $15–$25 per square foot for any server room protected by clean agent. A 10,000 sq ft office with a 300 sq ft server room: approximately $20,000–$50,000 for sprinklers plus $4,500–$7,500 for the server room clean agent system.
Office buildings generally have accessible drop ceilings, standard ceiling heights, and adequate water supply — all factors that keep installation costs on the lower end.
Warehouses and Industrial Buildings
Typical system: Wet sprinkler (heated) or dry sprinkler (unheated). High-hazard storage may require in-rack sprinklers in addition to ceiling coverage.
Cost range: $3–$8 per square foot for standard warehouse. $5–$12 per square foot for high-piled storage or in-rack applications. A 30,000 sq ft warehouse: $90,000–$240,000 for standard coverage. High-piled storage with in-rack protection can double that number.
Warehouse costs are driven by ceiling height (higher ceilings require larger sprinkler heads and more water pressure), storage class (the type and arrangement of stored materials), and whether sections are unheated (requiring dry system coverage).
Restaurants and Food Service
Typical system: Kitchen hood suppression (wet chemical) for all cooking areas, wet sprinkler for dining and back-of-house.
Cost range: $3,000–$10,000 for the kitchen hood system plus $2–$5 per square foot for sprinklers in the rest of the space. A 3,000 sq ft restaurant with a full commercial kitchen: approximately $10,000–$25,000 total.
The kitchen hood system is non-negotiable — NJ fire code requires it for every commercial cooking operation. The building sprinkler system may or may not be required depending on building size, construction type, and occupancy classification (see NJ code requirements section below).
Server Rooms and Data Centers
Typical system: Clean agent (FM-200 or Novec 1230) as the primary system, sometimes with a pre-action sprinkler as backup. Under-floor detection for raised-floor environments.
Cost range: $15–$30 per square foot depending on agent type and room configuration. A 1,000 sq ft server room: $15,000–$30,000. A 5,000 sq ft data center with redundant systems: $100,000–$200,000+.
Data center costs are driven by room integrity requirements (the room must be sealed to hold agent concentration), detection sophistication (VESDA or aspirating smoke detection adds $5,000–$15,000), and redundancy requirements (some facilities require dual-agent tanks for back-to-back discharge capability).
Retail Stores
Typical system: Wet sprinkler throughout. Standard hazard classification for most retail.
Cost range: $2–$5 per square foot. A 5,000 sq ft retail space: $10,000–$25,000. Open floor plans with standard ceilings keep retail installations straightforward.
Cost drivers in retail are primarily building age (retrofitting an older building costs more than new construction) and mezzanine levels (any elevated storage or display levels need separate sprinkler coverage).
Annual Inspection and Maintenance Costs
Your fire suppression system requires regular inspection per NJ fire code and NFPA standards. These are not optional — failing to inspect can result in code violations, fines, and insurance policy cancellation.
| Service | Frequency | Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| Wet sprinkler inspection | Quarterly visual + annual full | $200–$600/year |
| Dry sprinkler inspection | Quarterly visual + annual trip test | $400–$1,000/year |
| Clean agent inspection | Semi-annual | $500–$1,500/year |
| Pre-action inspection | Quarterly + annual trip test | $500–$1,200/year |
| Kitchen hood inspection | Semi-annual (every 6 months) | $200–$500/year |
| 5-year internal pipe inspection | Every 5 years | $1,000–$3,000 |
| Fire pump test (if applicable) | Weekly churn + annual flow test | $500–$2,000/year |
Total annual maintenance budget: Most NJ commercial buildings with standard wet sprinkler systems should budget $200–$800 per year for inspections. Buildings with complex systems (clean agent, pre-action, fire pump) should budget $1,000–$2,000+ per year. These costs are predictable and far cheaper than the consequences of an uninspected system.
Factors That Affect Fire Suppression System Cost
Two identical-sized buildings can have dramatically different fire suppression costs. Here are the factors that drive the price up or down:
New Construction vs. Retrofit
Installing a fire suppression system during new construction is 20–40% cheaper than retrofitting an existing building. In new construction, pipes run before walls and ceilings are finished. In a retrofit, installers must cut into finished ceilings, work around existing ductwork and electrical, patch drywall, and repaint. Retrofit projects also take longer, meaning more labor hours.
Building Height and Ceiling Configuration
Higher ceilings require larger sprinkler heads, higher water pressure, and potentially a fire pump. A standard 10-foot office ceiling is straightforward. A 30-foot warehouse ceiling requires ESFR (Early Suppression Fast Response) sprinkler heads that cost 3–5 times more than standard heads. Drop ceilings with accessible plenum space are cheaper to pipe than concrete T-beam ceilings.
Water Supply
Sprinkler systems need a reliable water supply at adequate pressure. If your building’s existing water service provides sufficient flow and pressure, the system ties in directly — minimal cost. If the water supply is insufficient (common in older NJ buildings), you may need a dedicated fire service line from the street ($5,000–$20,000), a fire pump ($10,000–$40,000), or a storage tank ($15,000–$50,000).
Hazard Classification
NFPA classifies occupancies by fire hazard level: Light Hazard (offices, hotels), Ordinary Hazard (retail, manufacturing), and Extra Hazard (chemical storage, woodworking). Higher hazard classifications require more sprinkler heads per square foot, larger pipe sizes, and greater water supply — all of which increase cost.
Pipe Material
Standard steel pipe (Schedule 40 black iron) is the most common and cost-effective material. CPVC (plastic) pipe is allowed in Light Hazard occupancies and costs 15–25% less than steel, but is not suitable for all applications. Stainless steel is used in corrosive environments and costs 2–3 times more than standard steel.
Seismic Bracing
NJ building code requires seismic bracing on fire sprinkler systems. The bracing prevents pipe movement during seismic events. While NJ is not a high seismic zone, the requirement still adds 5–10% to piping costs.
Permits and Engineering
Fire suppression systems require engineered drawings, hydraulic calculations, and permits from the local fire official and NJ Department of Community Affairs. Engineering fees typically run $1,500–$5,000 for standard commercial projects. Permit fees vary by municipality but generally run $500–$2,000.
NJ Fire Code Requirements: When Is Fire Suppression Required?
New Jersey adopts the International Building Code (IBC) with state amendments, enforced through the NJ Uniform Construction Code. Here is when fire suppression is required:
Automatic Sprinkler Systems Are Required In:
- All new commercial buildings over 5,000 sq ft — this is the most common trigger for NJ businesses. If you are building or significantly renovating a commercial space over 5,000 sq ft, sprinklers are required.
- All Group A (Assembly) occupancies — restaurants, bars, theaters, churches, event venues with occupant loads over 100.
- All Group E (Educational) occupancies — schools, daycare centers (over 12 children).
- All Group F-1 (Factory/Industrial) occupancies over 12,000 sq ft — manufacturing, fabrication, assembly plants.
- All Group H (High Hazard) occupancies — any building storing or using hazardous materials above threshold quantities.
- All Group I (Institutional) occupancies — hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living, jails.
- All Group R (Residential) occupancies — hotels, motels, dormitories, apartment buildings with 3+ units.
- All Group S-1 (Storage) occupancies over 12,000 sq ft — warehouses storing combustible materials.
- All buildings over 55 feet in height — regardless of occupancy type.
- All underground buildings — any floor level more than 30 feet below the exit discharge level.
Commercial Kitchen Hood Suppression Is Required In:
- All commercial cooking operations using grease-producing appliances (fryers, grills, griddles, charbroilers, woks).
- All Type I commercial kitchen hoods (which exhaust grease-laden vapors).
- This applies to restaurants, cafeterias, food trucks, catering kitchens, hotel kitchens, and institutional kitchens without exception.
When Fire Suppression Is NOT Required
- Small commercial spaces under 5,000 sq ft in buildings without other triggering factors (depending on construction type and occupancy).
- Existing buildings that are not undergoing substantial renovation (though retrofitting is often recommended by insurers).
- Certain Group B (Business) occupancies in fire-resistive or noncombustible construction under specific size thresholds.
Important: Even when not code-required, fire suppression may be required by your insurance carrier, landlord, or lending institution. Many NJ commercial leases require tenants to maintain fire suppression systems regardless of code minimums. Always check your lease and insurance policy.
Fire Suppression vs. Fire Alarm: Understanding the Difference
Business owners frequently confuse fire suppression systems with fire alarm systems. They are completely different systems that serve different purposes:
| Feature | Fire Suppression System | Fire Alarm System |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Extinguishes or controls fire | Detects fire and alerts occupants |
| How it works | Discharges water, gas, or chemical agent onto fire | Sounds horns, strobes, and notifies fire department |
| Components | Sprinkler heads, piping, valves, water/agent supply | Smoke detectors, pull stations, horns, strobes, panel |
| Fights fire? | Yes — actively suppresses or extinguishes | No — only detects and alerts |
| Typical cost | $2–$30/sq ft (depends on type) | $1–$5/sq ft |
| Required? | Depends on building size, type, and occupancy | Required in nearly all commercial buildings |
Most NJ commercial buildings need both. The fire alarm system detects the fire and notifies people. The fire suppression system fights the fire. They work together but are designed, installed, inspected, and maintained as separate systems with separate budgets.
In an integrated system, the fire alarm panel monitors the suppression system — it knows when sprinkler water flows, when a clean agent discharges, when a suppression system has a trouble condition. This integration is critical for proper fire department notification and building management.
ROI: How Fire Suppression Pays for Itself
Fire suppression systems are not just a compliance cost — they generate measurable financial return:
Insurance Premium Discounts: 5–15%
Commercial property insurance carriers in NJ typically offer 5–15% premium discounts for buildings with professionally installed, inspected, and monitored fire suppression systems. For a business paying $10,000/year in property insurance, that is $500–$1,500 per year in savings. Over a 20-year system life, that is $10,000–$30,000 in reduced insurance costs — often enough to recover a significant portion of the installation cost.
The exact discount depends on your insurer, building construction type, occupancy, and system type. Clean agent systems protecting high-value assets (data centers, manufacturing equipment) can qualify for even larger discounts because they reduce both fire damage and collateral water damage.
Property Value Increase
A fully sprinklered commercial building commands higher rent and sale price than an unsprinklered one. Tenants prefer sprinklered buildings because their own insurance costs are lower. Buyers prefer them because the fire protection infrastructure is already in place. In NJ’s commercial real estate market, a sprinkler system is not a luxury — it is expected.
Business Continuity Protection
The average commercial fire causes $70,000–$100,000 in direct property damage. But the real cost is business interruption — lost revenue while your building is being repaired. Sprinkler systems control fires at the point of origin 96% of the time, meaning the fire stays small, damage is localized, and your business is back online in days instead of months.
For NJ businesses carrying business interruption insurance, a sprinklered building also reduces interruption claims — which keeps your long-term insurance costs lower.
Liability Protection
If a fire in your building injures an employee, customer, or damages a neighboring property, having a properly maintained fire suppression system demonstrates due diligence. Conversely, not having required fire protection — or having a system with lapsed inspections — creates significant legal liability exposure.
Common Fire Suppression Systems for NJ Businesses
Based on our 41 years of installing fire protection in New Jersey, here are the most common system configurations we install by business type:
Small Office (Under 5,000 sq ft)
If the building already has sprinklers, the tenant’s responsibility is typically limited to maintaining fire extinguishers and ensuring the landlord keeps the sprinkler system inspected. If sprinklers are not present and not code-required, a monitored fire alarm system is the minimum recommended protection. Cost: $2,000–$5,000 for fire alarm.
Medium Office (5,000–20,000 sq ft)
Wet sprinkler system throughout, clean agent in the server/IT room, monitored fire alarm system. Total fire protection budget: $25,000–$75,000 depending on building conditions.
Restaurant
Kitchen hood suppression (required), wet sprinkler if building size/occupancy triggers the requirement, monitored fire alarm. Total: $15,000–$40,000.
Warehouse (20,000–50,000 sq ft)
Wet or dry sprinkler system depending on heating, in-rack sprinklers for high-piled storage, monitored fire alarm. Total: $80,000–$300,000 depending on storage classification and ceiling height.
Data Center / Server Room
Clean agent (FM-200 or Novec 1230) as primary, pre-action sprinkler as code-required backup, VESDA aspirating detection, monitored fire alarm. Total for a 1,000 sq ft room: $30,000–$60,000.
Retail Store (3,000–10,000 sq ft)
Wet sprinkler system, monitored fire alarm. Straightforward installation in most retail spaces. Total: $10,000–$40,000.
Security Dynamics Fire Suppression Services
Security Dynamics Inc. provides complete fire suppression services for NJ commercial properties:
System Design and Engineering
Our licensed engineers design fire suppression systems to NFPA standards and NJ fire code. We handle hydraulic calculations, shop drawings, permit submissions, and coordination with your architect and general contractor. We design for your actual building conditions — not a generic template.
Installation
Our NJ-licensed technicians install wet sprinkler, dry sprinkler, pre-action, and kitchen hood suppression systems. We also install and integrate fire alarm systems for complete fire protection coverage. NJ Fire Alarm License #P00747.
Inspection and Testing
We perform all NFPA-required inspections and testing: quarterly visual inspections, annual comprehensive inspections, flow tests, trip tests, 5-year internal pipe inspections, and kitchen hood semi-annual inspections. Every inspection is documented and deficiencies are reported with recommended corrective actions.
Monitoring
Our 24/7 central monitoring station receives fire alarm and sprinkler waterflow signals and dispatches the fire department immediately. Monitored fire protection is required by NJ fire code for most commercial fire alarm systems and is recommended for all fire suppression systems.
Service and Repair
When something goes wrong — a sprinkler head gets bumped, a valve needs rebuilding, a clean agent cylinder needs recharging — our service team responds. We stock common parts and maintain relationships with all major fire suppression manufacturers for fast parts sourcing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a fire sprinkler system cost per square foot in NJ?
Wet sprinkler systems cost $2–$7 per square foot installed in New Jersey. Dry sprinkler systems run $3–$10 per square foot. The actual cost depends on building height, construction type, water supply availability, hazard classification, and whether the installation is new construction or retrofit. Retrofit installations typically cost 20–40% more than new construction.
Does my NJ business need a fire suppression system?
If your commercial building is over 5,000 square feet, the answer is almost certainly yes. NJ fire code requires automatic sprinkler systems in all new commercial construction over 5,000 sq ft, all assembly occupancies, all educational occupancies, and all buildings over 55 feet tall. Even if your building is not code-required to have suppression, your commercial lease or insurance carrier may require it.
What is the difference between a fire sprinkler and a fire suppression system?
A fire sprinkler system is one type of fire suppression system — it uses water discharged through sprinkler heads to control or extinguish fire. Fire suppression is a broader category that includes sprinklers, clean agent systems (FM-200, Novec 1230), kitchen hood systems (wet chemical), and specialty systems (foam, dry chemical). The right type depends on what you are protecting.
How long does fire suppression installation take?
A standard wet sprinkler system for a 5,000–10,000 sq ft commercial space takes 1–2 weeks for installation. Larger buildings (20,000+ sq ft) take 3–6 weeks. Clean agent systems for a server room take 3–5 days. Kitchen hood systems take 1–2 days. These timelines assume permits are already approved — permit review adds 2–6 weeks depending on the municipality.
Can I install a fire suppression system myself?
No. New Jersey requires fire suppression systems to be designed by a licensed professional engineer and installed by a licensed fire protection contractor. Self-installation violates NJ code, will not pass inspection, will void your insurance, and creates serious life-safety liability. Always use a licensed NJ installer.
How often does a fire suppression system need to be inspected?
Wet sprinkler systems require quarterly visual inspections and annual comprehensive inspections. Dry systems require quarterly inspections with an annual trip test. Kitchen hood systems require semi-annual inspection (every 6 months). Clean agent systems require semi-annual inspection. Additionally, all sprinkler systems require a 5-year internal pipe inspection and a 10-year hydrostatic test.
Will a fire sprinkler system cause water damage?
Individual sprinkler heads activate independently — only the heads directly above the fire discharge water. In a typical fire, 1–2 heads activate, releasing approximately 20–25 gallons per minute each. This is far less water than a fire department hose (which delivers 100–250 gallons per minute). Studies consistently show that sprinkler water damage is a fraction of the damage caused by fire department hose streams on an unsprinklered fire.
What happens when a fire sprinkler goes off accidentally?
Accidental sprinkler discharge is extremely rare. The National Fire Protection Association reports that the odds of an accidental discharge are 1 in 16 million per sprinkler head per year. Modern sprinkler heads are individually heat-activated and will not discharge from smoke, steam, or minor heat fluctuations. If an accidental discharge does occur, the affected area can be shut down with a valve closure in minutes.
Do fire suppression systems increase property value?
Yes. Sprinklered commercial buildings in NJ command higher rents and sale prices than unsprinklered ones. They also qualify for 5–15% insurance premium discounts, attract a wider pool of tenants (many businesses require sprinklered space), and reduce the risk of catastrophic fire loss that would destroy property value entirely.
Can I get financing for a fire suppression system?
Many NJ businesses finance fire suppression installations through commercial equipment loans, SBA loans, or leasing arrangements. Some fire protection contractors offer payment plans. The insurance savings (5–15% premium reduction) and property value increase often justify the financing cost. Talk to your insurance agent about potential savings before budgeting — the net cost may be lower than you expect.
Next Steps
Fire suppression is not optional for most NJ commercial properties — and even where code does not require it, the business case is strong. Insurance savings, property value, liability protection, and business continuity all point in the same direction: a properly designed and installed fire suppression system is one of the smartest investments a building owner can make.
If you need to know what your specific building requires and what it will cost, Security Dynamics Inc. can help. We provide free on-site assessments for commercial properties throughout New Jersey. We will evaluate your building, identify code requirements, recommend the right system type, and provide a detailed cost estimate — no obligation, no sales pressure.
Get a free fire protection assessment: Call (609) 394-8800 or email sdynamicsnj@gmail.com. We have been protecting NJ businesses for over 41 years.
