Fire Watch Guard Services in Fort Worth, TX
The Fast Fire Watch Company puts certified fire watch guards on Fort Worth properties in under three hours, day or night, every day of the year. We cover sprinkler and alarm impairments, hot work, construction sites, and special events across Tarrant County and the wider Fort Worth area, and every patrol comes with GPS-tracked logs the Fort Worth Fire Department will accept.
A retired firefighter started this company, so we read the code the way the inspector does. We keep your building square with the Fort Worth Fire Department and the International Fire Code (IFC) that Texas and the City of Fort Worth have adopted, from the first round we walk to the closeout packet you hand over.
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A Complete Definition
What Is Fire Watch in Fort Worth, TX?
A fire watch in Fort Worth is a trained guard who patrols your property on a set route while fire protection is down or hot work is underway, watching for fire and calling 911 the moment it starts. We provide that guard. A licensed guard reaches most Fort Worth addresses in under three hours, and we run coverage around the clock with no long-term contract. One call gets you a confirmed start time and a guard already reading your situation.
The job is simple to describe and exacting to do right. The guard walks a fixed route, logs each pass, and stays ready to call 911 the second smoke or flame shows. Texas law expects that coverage any time a building’s built-in protection is impaired or a crew is welding or cutting. The IFC, adopted by the State of Texas and the City of Fort Worth, sets the rule; the Fort Worth Fire Department applies it building by building. The guard holds the line and keeps your permit valid until repairs are signed off.
We work the whole map. A guard might be staged in a Sundance Square office tower one night and out at a Barnett Shale service yard the next, with stops in the Cultural District museums, the TCU area, the medical district, and the warehouses around Alliance Airport in between. Call any hour and we will lock in a guard, a start time, and a patrol log built for the inspector’s desk.
When Fire Watch Is Required in Fort Worth
A Fort Worth fire watch is typically triggered by one of six conditions:
- A fire alarm system is out of service for more than four hours within any 24-hour period (NFPA 72).
- A sprinkler system is impaired for more than ten hours within any 24-hour period (NFPA 25).
- Hot work (welding, cutting, brazing, grinding, torch-down roofing) is performed in or near combustible materials (NFPA 51B and OSHA 1910.252).
- Active construction is underway and permanent fire protection isn't yet operational (NFPA 241).
- A special event introduces temporary structures, increased occupancy, or pyrotechnics.
- A fire marshal has issued a violation that requires interim watch coverage until repairs are complete.
A watch is required the moment any one of these triggers lands, and each carries its own patrol interval, paperwork, and sign-off path. A company that already knows how Fort Worth handles each trigger means fewer correction notices and a faster release.
Who in Fort Worth Needs Fire Watch Services?
The buildings that need a fire watch are the ones that, right now, cannot protect themselves: any property with a shut-down sprinkler riser, a faulted alarm panel, or a standpipe out of service, plus any site running open flame or sparks near combustible material. When the built-in system goes quiet, the structure stops detecting and suppressing on its own. A guard fills that hole by walking the property on a set schedule and calling 911 before a spark becomes a loss.
Across Fort Worth that means welders and grinding crews, building teams riding out alarm or sprinkler repairs, contractors on active job sites, and operators running large crowds at places like the Fort Worth Convention Center, the Stockyards event grounds, and the Will Rogers Memorial Center. Each round gets stamped with the time and the guard’s name, so the record you hand the Fort Worth Fire Department on inspection holds up. We pick up the phone 24/7.
The Cost of Skipping a Fire Watch in Fort Worth
Skipping the fire watch is what turns a manageable repair into a shutdown. The Fort Worth Fire Department can red-tag the building, halt your work, and write a violation that follows the property, and an inspection you should have passed becomes one you fail. Hot work without a posted watch is among the most-cited fire violations year after year, and Tarrant County citations are no exception.
The bill climbs from there. Your insurer can deny a claim or challenge coverage when the required watch was not maintained, which puts the owner on the hook for the loss. Worse, an unwatched impairment is exactly when a small ignition runs unchecked through a building that has no working sprinklers or alarms to stop it. The hourly cost of a guard is a rounding error next to a denied claim, a stop-work order, or a fire that nobody was there to catch.
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What's Included with Every Fire Watch Patrol
Everyone asks about pricing and response time, and those matter. But the real product we deliver is documentation. Here’s what comes standard with every deployment.
GPS-Tracked Patrol Log
Every patrol round is timestamped, geo-located, and recorded against the route the AHJ expects. The log is reviewable in real time and exportable for your inspection file.
Photo Documentation
Guards capture timestamped photos at each patrol checkpoint and around any observed hazard, providing visual proof of compliance for fire marshals, insurance carriers, and corporate risk teams.
AHJ-Compliant Reporting
Our digital fire watch logs are formatted to meet the documentation standards of the major U.S. fire marshals, including FDNY, LAFD, Chicago Fire Department, Tampa Fire Rescue, JFRD, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue, Phoenix Fire Department, Fort Worth Fire Department, SDFD, and Philadelphia Fire Department, among others.
Certified, Vetted, and Insured Guards
Every guard is OSHA-trained, holds an F-01 certification where the AHJ requires one, is fire-watch certified and OSHA-trained, and is covered under our $2M general liability and workers’ compensation policies.
Fire Extinguisher On Hand
Hot work and high-risk patrols include a charged, inspection-current fire extinguisher carried by the guard for the duration of the watch.
Direct Account Manager
Multi-day or multi-shift deployments are assigned a dedicated account manager who handles shift hand-offs, schedule changes, and any direct coordination with your facilities team or the AHJ.
End-of-Engagement Compliance Packet
When the watch ends, you receive a complete compliance packet:patrol logs, photos, guard certifications, and AHJ correspondence, all ready for your insurance file and any post-event review.
How Much Does Fire Watch Cost in Fort Worth, TX?
Fire watch services are billed at an hourly rate, and the cost per hour depends on five factors:the type of impairment or operation, the certification level required, the time of day, the duration of the engagement, and the speed at which we need to deploy
What Drives Fire Watch Staff Pricing
- Service type. Hot work fire watch services require additional certifications and equipment, which carry a higher rate than standard alarm or sprinkler impairment coverage.
- Time of day. Overnight, weekend, and holiday coverage carry premium rates because of guard staffing economics.
- Emergency vs. scheduled. Same day emergency deployments within our 3-hour SLA are billed at a higher rate than 24- to 48-hour notice scheduled coverage.
- Duration. Multi-day, multi-week, and monthly deployments qualify for tiered hourly discounts that bring the blended rate well below the emergency rate.
- Number of guards required. High-rise properties, large construction sites, and multi-shift coverage require multiple guards in rotation.
Typical Fire Watch Guard Cost Range
A standard, scheduled fire watch deployment in Fort Worth typically falls in the $30 to $50 per hour range per guard, with emergency and same-day rates running higher and long-term contracted coverage running lower. We don’t publish a flat national pricing rate because doing so would be misleading. Hourly rates vary. What you actually pay is set by the variables above.
Get a Specific Quote
Call 1-800-899-7524 for a same-day quote, or use our online quote form. Our staffing team will confirm the impairment type, the AHJ, the deployment timeline, and the number of personnel required, then send a written quote with the exact fire watch hourly rate and the projected total for your engagement.
What Fort Worth Fire Department Fire Prevention Bureau Requires
Code-compliant fire watch service in Fort Worth. Texas runs on the International Fire Code (IFC), adopted by the State of Texas and the City of Fort Worth. The Fort Worth Fire Department and the Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office enforce it at the building level, and our guards patrol and log every shift to that standard.
Hot work coverage under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B. Welding, cutting, and grinding call for a watch during the work and for at least 30 minutes after the tools go cold, per IFC sections 3504.2.1 through 3504.2.6. That half-hour hold is where most hidden fires start, so the guard stays on the smoldering material the crew never sees, extinguisher in hand.
Impaired systems under NFPA 25 and 72. When a sprinkler system (NFPA 25) or fire alarm (NFPA 72) drops out for repair or upgrade, a guard holds the required watch until the work is verified and the system is fully back online.
Tarrant County jurisdiction. The Fort Worth Fire Department and the local fire marshal set the conditions for your watch, and we build coverage around their call so it stands up when the inspector shows.
Documented closeout. Each shift closes with a signed, time-stamped log you can file as proof the watch ran without a gap.
- Fire alarm system out of service longer than 4 hours in a 24-hour period (NFPA 72)
- Sprinkler system impairment longer than 10 hours in a 24-hour period (NFPA 25)
- Hot work in any occupied structure (NFPA 51B)
- Active construction sites without complete fire protection (NFPA 241)
- Special events with temporary structures or occupancy increases
- Fire marshal-issued violation requiring interim watch
How Fast Can You Be On-Site in Fort Worth?
- Downtown Fort Worth & Sundance Square – under 60 minutes
- Greater Tarrant County metro area – under 90 minutes
- Arlington, Grand Prairie, and Irving – under 2 hours
- Extended Texas coverage area – under 3 hours
Services We Provide in Fort Worth
- High-Rise Fire Watch – Dedicated patrols for downtown Fort Worth towers where standpipe or sprinkler systems are offline
- Corporate & Office Fire Watch – Discreet uniformed guards for Tarrant County commercial buildings during alarm panel or suppression outages
- Construction Site Fire Watch – Code-required coverage for active Fort Worth job sites performing hot work or lacking completed suppression systems
- Hot Work Fire Watch – Continuous monitoring during and 30 min after welding, cutting, or grinding operations per IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B
- Industrial & Warehouse Fire Watch – Patrol and monitoring for Fort Worth manufacturing plants, distribution centers, and storage facilities at the AllianceTexas hub
- Event & Venue Fire Watch – Trained guards for concerts, conventions, and gatherings at venues like the Fort Worth Convention Center, the Stockyards, and the Cultural District museums
- Hospitality Fire Watch – Guest-facing patrols for Fort Worth hotels and resorts during system impairments, keeping evacuations orderly
- Healthcare & Hospital Fire Watch – ILSM-compliant coverage for facilities like JPS Health Network, Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth, and Cook Children's
Construction work anchors our Fort Worth Fire Watch Services, because a job site carries fire risk long before the permanent protection is wired in. IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241 put a fire watch on a Fort Worth site when temporary heat, hot work, or stacked combustibles raise the hazard, or when standpipes and alarms are not yet live. New towers going up downtown, the distribution builds out by Alliance Airport, and mixed-use projects near the Near Southside all sit under that rule through their build and renovation phases.
Our guards take the structure floor by floor, sweep for ignition sources left at shift change, and keep a written log for the general contractor and the Fort Worth Fire Department. Coverage runs overnight, through weekends, and across any stretch when the trades are gone but the hazard is not. Tell us your site schedule and permit conditions and we will match a guard to them.
Why Fort Worth Fire Watch Demand Stays High
Downtown high-rise and Sundance Square. The downtown towers and the Sundance Square district pack dense office and entertainment space into tight floor plates, so one alarm-panel fault or a planned sprinkler shutdown can put several floors and tenants on a required watch at once.
AllianceTexas logistics and aerospace construction. The AllianceTexas hub, the Amazon fulfillment centers, and the warehouse and aerospace builds around Alliance Airport keep ground broken year-round, where hot work permits and offline systems pull in coverage under IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241 and 51B.
TCU campus and medical district. Texas Christian University and the Fort Worth medical district renovate and expand constantly, and standpipe repairs, alarm upgrades, and tenant build-outs routinely take life-safety systems offline mid-project.
Stockyards and Cultural District venues. The Fort Worth Stockyards, the convention center, and the Cultural District museums host assembly crowds that bring temporary structures, swollen occupancy, and pyrotechnics, each of which can trigger a watch under the IFC.
Oil-and-gas and warehouse outages. The Barnett Shale service sites, the manufacturing plants, and the distribution corridors run heavy industrial space where a single sprinkler shutdown or alarm fault leaves a building exposed until crews bring it back.
Fort Worth Areas We Cover
- Downtown Fort Worth: high-rise office and residential
- Sundance Square: dining, retail, and entertainment
- Fort Worth Stockyards: historic district and event venues
- Cultural District: museums and assembly venues
- TCU campus: university buildings and construction
- Medical district: hospitals and clinical facilities
- AllianceTexas: logistics, aerospace, and warehouse hub
- Alliance Airport area: hangars and light industrial
- Near Southside: mixed-use and medical development
- West 7th district: retail, dining, and high-rise residential
- Barnett Shale corridor: oil-and-gas service and industrial
NFPA & OSHA Compliance
The Standards Behind Every Fort Worth Fire Watch
Every Fort Worth fire watch we run holds to the same standard the IFC and the Fort Worth Fire Department demand, whether the address is a West 7th high-rise, a Stockyards venue, a TCU building, or an AllianceTexas warehouse. Tell us the address and what needs watching, and a guard with a patrol log is on the way.
International Fire Code (IFC)
The umbrella fire code that Texas and the City of Fort Worth adopt as the basis for fire prevention. The IFC gives the Fort Worth Fire Department its authority to require a fire watch and points to the more specific operational standards below.
NFPA 25, Standard for the Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance of Water-Based Fire Protection Systems
NFPA 25 defines a sprinkler ‘impairment.’ Once a sprinkler system is out of service for more than ten hours within any 24-hour period, the impairment coordinator must notify the Fort Worth Fire Department and either restore the system or post a fire watch. We document our sprinkler-impairment watches straight against the NFPA 25 impairment program requirements.
NFPA 72, National Fire Alarm and Signaling Code
NFPA 72 is the matching standard for fire alarm and detection systems. A fire alarm out of service for more than four hours within any 24-hour period requires either restoration or a documented fire watch. Our alarm-impairment guards focus on occupant notification readiness and continuous patrols at the interval the Fort Worth Fire Department sets.
NFPA 51B and IFC Chapter 35, Hot Work Safety
IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B require a fire watch during hot work wherever combustibles sit within 35 feet of the work, the floors or walls are combustible, or an opening could carry sparks. Under IFC sections 3504.2.1 through 3504.2.6, the watch holds for at least 30 minutes after the work ends, with extinguishing equipment right there.
NFPA 241 and IFC Chapter 33, Construction Fire Safety
NFPA 241 and IFC Chapter 33 govern fire prevention on active construction, alteration, and demolition sites across Fort Worth. They call for a designated fire prevention program manager, a written site fire prevention plan, and fire watch coverage any time hot work runs or the fire protection systems are not fully operational.
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.252 and 29 CFR 1926.352
OSHA’s general industry and construction hot work standards track NFPA 51B and apply federally no matter which code a state adopts. Failing to post a fire watch during hot work is one of the most-cited fire-related OSHA violations every year, and it turns up routinely in Tarrant County citations.
Texas and City of Fort Worth overlay
The Fort Worth Fire Department and the Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office enforce these standards under the International Fire Code (IFC) as adopted by the State of Texas with City of Fort Worth amendments. Those local amendments add documentation expectations we build into every engagement.
Comprehensive Fire Watch Services in Fort Worth, TX
Fort Worth fire watch coverage comes down to one call: a licensed guard on site fast, any hour of any day, with a documented patrol log waiting for the inspector and no long-term contract to sign. The rate runs $30 to $50 per hour. Call now and we will confirm your guard and a start time on the spot.
Commercial Fire Watch in Fort Worth
Office buildings, retail centers, hotels, multifamily towers, and HOA-managed condominiums make up the largest share of our Fort Worth deployments. Our commercial guards know high-rise stairwell patrols, occupancy management during alarm impairments, and the Fort Worth Fire Department log documentation a property manager can hand straight to an inspector. When you compare Fort Worth fire watch companies, that hand-off-ready paperwork is what separates a clean release from a repeat visit.
Construction Site Fire Watch (NFPA 241) in Fort Worth
Active construction sites in the area carry real fire risk from temporary heat, combustible debris, and fire protection that is not yet finished. Our NFPA 241-trained guards rotate through hot work zones, watch the temporary heating gear, verify end-of-shift cleanup, and stand the overnight watch when the site systems are off. On long builds we rotate multiple guards so the coverage never thins out.
Hot Work Fire Watch in Fort Worth
Welding, cutting, brazing, grinding, and torch-down roofing each require a dedicated fire watch under IFC Chapter 35, NFPA 51B, and OSHA 1910.252. Our Fort Worth hot work guards stay through the operation and the full 30-minute cooldown the standard sets, often 60 minutes when the marshal asks, with a charged extinguisher in hand and a logged note on every spark they see.
Special Events & Assembly Occupancy Fire Watch in Fort Worth
Concerts, festivals, conventions, and sporting events at venues like the Fort Worth Convention Center, the Stockyards, and the Cultural District museums can require a fire watch under the International Fire Code assembly provisions and local amendments. Our event guards work with venue operations, fire department staging, and crowd management to hold compliance from doors open to last call.
Healthcare and Industrial Fire Watch in Fort Worth
Hospital campuses such as JPS Health Network, Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth, and Cook Children’s need personnel who know clinical protocols and ILSM rules. Industrial and warehouse sites at the AllianceTexas hub and along the Barnett Shale corridor need guards at ease with the heat, electrical, and material-handling realities of those floors. We credential for both.
Fort Worth Fire Watch FAQs
Yes. Every Fort Worth team member is trained, insured, background-checked, and licensed through the Texas Department of Public Safety Private Security Bureau (DPS PSB), and holds the required fire watch credentials. Armed work is staffed with DPS PSB commissioned (Level III) personnel.
Downtown and central Fort Worth usually run 60 to 120 minutes. The outer Tarrant County metro area runs 2 to 3 hours, and outer counties can reach 4 hours. Dispatch is 24/7.
Yes. Our digital logs meet Fort Worth Fire Department and Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office documentation standards, with timestamped GPS, photos, and signatures on every round.
Yes. We run regular fire watch coverage at hotels, warehouses, and corporate properties throughout downtown Fort Worth and the surrounding business districts.
Yes. NFPA 241 construction fire watch is one of our biggest service lines across the AllianceTexas logistics hub and the downtown high-rise market, and we put multi-guard rotations on extended projects.
Hourly pricing depends on duration, time of day, and guard count. Call 1-800-899-7524 for a specific quote, usually back to you within 15 minutes.
The Fort Worth Fire Department enforces the International Fire Code (IFC) as adopted by the State of Texas and the City of Fort Worth. A watch is required when a fire alarm is out longer than 4 hours in 24, a sprinkler is impaired longer than 10 hours, during hot work in occupied structures (IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B), at active construction sites without complete fire protection (IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241), at special events with temporary structures, and any time a fire marshal violation calls for an interim watch.
It is a continuous, documented patrol by a trained certified guard. Intervals run 15 to 30 minutes depending on the property, and high-rise and large construction jobs use multi-guard rotations. Each round is logged with timestamp, GPS, observations, photos, and signature. Coverage runs 24/7 with documented shift handoffs until the impaired system is restored and the Fort Worth Fire Department documentation requirements are met.
Our Fort Worth Fire Watch Guards run continuous safety patrols, spot ignition sources and hazards, supervise hot work through the required 30-minute post-work hold, stay in contact with property management and dispatch, document every round, and act as first-response notification. Every guard is licensed through the Texas Department of Public Safety Private Security Bureau (DPS PSB) and holds NFPA and OSHA fire watch credentials, with added training for construction, healthcare, and high-rise environments.
Yes. The Fast Fire Watch Company covers Fort Worth, TX and all of Tarrant County with certified fire watch guards, on site fast and available 24/7, for impairments, hot work, construction, and special events, with Fort Worth Fire Department-compliant documentation on every deployment. Among Fire Watch Companies in Fort Worth, we built the company around the inspector’s paperwork, not just the patrol.
We put a licensed guard on site fast, and often sooner for addresses near downtown, Sundance Square, or the AllianceTexas hub. We answer 24 hours a day, every day of the year. When you call, give us the address, what triggered the need, and how long coverage should run, and we will confirm a guard and a start time on that same call.
Texas requires a fire watch whenever a building’s built-in fire protection is impaired or hot work is underway. That covers a sprinkler system out of service under NFPA 25, a fire alarm offline under NFPA 72, welding or cutting under IFC Chapter 35 and NFPA 51B, and construction conditions under IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241. The Fort Worth Fire Department enforces these rules locally under the International Fire Code. If you are not sure your situation qualifies, call and we will walk through it before dispatching.
The exact rate depends on property size, the number of guards, and the patrol schedule the code or your permit requires. We do not require a long-term contract, so you pay only for the coverage window you actually need, whether that is one overnight shift during hot work or several weeks while a sprinkler system is repaired. We give you a clear rate before any guard is dispatched, with no hidden setup fees.
The guard walks a fixed route across your property on a set schedule, watching for smoke, heat, and any sign of fire. Each pass goes into a patrol log with a time stamp and the guard’s name. If a fire starts, the guard calls 911 right away and follows the building’s evacuation plan. During hot work, the guard keeps an extinguisher within reach and stays on watch for 30 to 60 minutes after the tools stop. That finished log becomes your proof of coverage for the Fort Worth Fire Department.
Often, yes. Fort Worth’s downtown towers and Near Southside high-rises drop fire alarm or sprinkler systems offline for upgrades, standpipe repairs, and tenant build-outs. Under NFPA 25 and NFPA 72, a building cannot sit unprotected while those systems are down, so a fire watch fills the gap until repairs are verified. We carry high-rise towers through these projects, patrolling each floor and logging every pass so the property keeps a clean record for the Fort Worth Fire Department and the Tarrant County program.
We staff Fort Worth coverage around the clock, get a licensed guard on site quickly, and document every patrol to the International Fire Code standard the Fort Worth Fire Department enforces. From AllianceTexas warehouse construction and downtown high-rises to TCU renovations and the Stockyards venues, we know the buildings and the inspectors. Call us and you get a guard, a clear rate, and a record built for the fire marshal. That is why owners pick our Fort Worth Fire Watch Guards and rate us above other Fort Worth fire watch companies.
Our Google Reviews
Fast Fire Watch provides fast and reliable services. Services are well-organized, communication is clear, and coverage is handled efficiently to meet client needs.
Last updated: June 2026
Very Professional service. From booking service to ending service, the communication is always constant, clear and very professional. Guards are polite and do their job efficiently and well. Best company!
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My company did an amazing job. I love them all so much.
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Great company to work with!! They are honest.
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Very professional team and quality service. Exactly what you hope for in a company.
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Absolutely love the company and the great employees that does an amazing job! 10/10
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Recent Fort Worth Fire Watch Jobs
Standpipe Impairment Fire Watch in Downtown Fort Worth
A high-rise office tower in downtown Fort Worth took its standpipe system offline for riser work, and the Fort Worth Fire Department required a fire watch for the occupied building. We staffed two guards on a rotation covering the stair towers and the office floors under NFPA 25. Every patrol ran on GPS-tracked logs so the rounds were verified, and the building got a clean compliance packet once the standpipe was recharged and signed off.
NFPA 241 Fire Watch at the AllianceTexas Logistics Hub
A warehouse build at the AllianceTexas logistics hub ran with the permanent sprinkler system offline through construction. Hot work zones and welding on the structure put it under IFC Chapter 33 and NFPA 241, so the Fort Worth Fire Department required coverage. Our guards worked overnight shifts, patrolling the active floors and the material laydown at set intervals with GPS-logged rounds. Extinguishers stayed staged at each cutting station, and the project closed with zero incidents and zero citations.
Emergency Alarm Outage — Medical Office Near Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth
A medical office near Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth lost its fire alarm when the control panel failed. With the system down, NFPA 72 called for a fire watch until it was repaired. We had a guard on site fast, walking 15-minute patrols through the exam suites, the records storage, and the mechanical room. Coverage held day and night until the replacement panel was installed, tested, and back in service.
Fire Watch Services Near Fort Worth
We provide certified fire watch guards in Fort Worth and the surrounding area, on site in under three hours, 24/7. Explore our nearest service areas below.
Our Commitment to Your Peace of Mind
Our commitment to you comes from years of experience building relationships and trust with our clients.
We have:
- Years of experience securing buildings and events so that your people and assets are safe. We built our business and experience over many years and with thousands of clients.
- Our fire watch guards have walked thousands of miles on fire watch patrols using experienced fire professionals including former firefighters.
- Managed a growing network of local fire watch companies across the USA. We provide great service, deliver on our core values and are committed to ongoing training for our teams.
- Maintained a loyal core of fire watch staff and clients because of what we do and who we are.
- We have kept our promise to always deliver the most professional service and the best people to guard everything that’s important to you.
Your trust is earned. Your satisfaction is our reward. Secure your buildings with The Fast Fire Watch Company.
We've Got You Covered
Looking for coverage beyond Fort Worth? Explore our Fire Watch Guard Services in Texas or learn more about The Fast Fire Watch Company.
Last updated: June 2026