{"title":"How to Test a Smoke Detector (Monthly + Yearly Safety Check)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/home-improvement/how-to-test-a-smoke-detector","category":{"slug":"home-improvement","name":"Home Improvement"},"creator":{"name":"S.E.R. Safety","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3GTYMoVZvr8ghPLIpAsq4w","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zi09hF6mn0c"},"tldr":"Test every smoke detector in your home the right way. Monthly press-and-hold check plus a yearly real-smoke test - works for Kidde, First Alert, and more.","totalDurationSeconds":363,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Step ladder","Matches or smoke tester aerosol"],"materials":["9V batteries","Replacement smoke detectors (every 10 years)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Locate Every Smoke Detector in the House","text":"Before you test anything, walk through the house with a notepad and write down every smoke detector you find. Code requires one inside each bedroom, one outside each sleeping area (the hallway between bedrooms is the standard spot), and at least one on every level - basement included. A combination smoke + carbon monoxide unit usually goes in the bedroom hallway.Most detectors live on the ceiling 4 to 12 inches off the nearest wall, or high on a wall 4 to 12 inches below the ceiling. If a room is missing a detector, add it to your list - you can fix that with our smoke detector install guide after the test is done."},{"number":2,"title":"Identify the Model and Check the Date","text":"Pull each detector off its mounting bracket and read the label on the back. You are looking for two things: the model number and the manufacture date. Common residential units are the Kidde 30CUAR (dual smoke + carbon monoxide), the Kidde 20SAR (photoelectric smoke only), and First Alert SA series. If the date on the back is more than 10 years ago, the whole unit needs to come down and a new one goes up - no exceptions, sensors degrade.While you have it down, flip it over and check whether the test button looks dusty or yellowed. Yellow plastic is a sign the unit lived through a kitchen fire or a hot attic and is suspect. Replace it."},{"number":3,"title":"Do the Monthly Press-and-Hold Test","text":"Climb up to the detector and push the round test button on the front for two to three seconds. The unit should chirp loudly - 85 decibels at 10 feet is the code spec, which is loud enough to wake you from a dead sleep. The green power LED should also be solid before you start (a blinking LED on a hardwired unit means it is running on backup battery only, which is a different problem).The press-and-hold test only confirms the speaker and the test circuit work. It does not tell you whether the smoke sensor itself is functional. That is the limitation - and it is why you also need the canned smoke test later in this list."},{"number":4,"title":"Confirm Interconnect by Walking the House","text":"While the test alarm is still sounding, walk to a different detector in another room. On a hardwired home built after 2000, every detector in the house should be sounding at the same time - that is the interconnect doing its job. If only the unit you pressed is sounding and the rest are silent, the red interconnect wire in the ceiling box is loose or never got connected.Battery-only detectors with no interconnect wiring are also a real concern in older homes. If yours do not chirp together, look into adding wireless interconnect units (First Alert SCO500B, Kidde RF-SM-DC) so a fire in the basement actually wakes you up on the second floor."},{"number":5,"title":"Run the Yearly Canned-Smoke Test","text":"Once a year, do the real test - the one that actually proves the sensor is alive. Grab a can of testing aerosol (Solo A4 is the pro standard, but consumer cans like SDi Smoke! work fine), shake it, and spray a one to two second burst from about a foot below the detector. Aim toward the unit, not directly into it - you want the smoke to drift up to the sensor the way real smoke would.Within 10 to 15 seconds the alarm should sound. If it does not, the sensor is contaminated or dead and the detector needs to come down for cleaning or replacement. A unit that passes the button test but fails the smoke test is the exact kind that lets a real fire burn unnoticed."},{"number":6,"title":"Press the Hush Button to Silence the Alarm","text":"Once the alarm is sounding and you have confirmed it works, press the hush button on the front of the unit to quiet it. Most modern detectors silence for 7 to 10 minutes so the residual smoke can clear without an ear-splitting chirp the whole time. The unit will start re-sampling the air after the hush window expires - if smoke is still in the chamber, it sounds again.The hush button is also what you press during the inevitable burnt-toast incident. Do not pull the battery to silence it. The whole point of a smoke alarm is that it is always armed."},{"number":7,"title":"Replace the 9V Backup Battery Every Year","text":"Even on hardwired detectors, the backup battery does the real work during a power outage - which is exactly when most fatal house fires happen. Swap the 9V (or AA depending on the model) once a year. The classic reminder is to do it when you change the clocks for daylight saving, but any annual anchor works.A detector that chirps every 30 to 60 seconds is telling you the battery is low. Replace it. Do not pull the unit down and leave it dead - a disabled detector is the leading cause of fire fatalities according to the NFPA."},{"number":8,"title":"Dust the Vents and Replace at 10 Years","text":"Every three months, run a dry microfiber cloth or the brush attachment on a vacuum over the vent slots on the side of the detector. Dust buildup is the most common reason an older unit gets sluggish - the sensing chamber clogs and smoke has a harder time reaching the sensor. Do not spray cleaning chemicals on or near a detector. Plain dry dusting only.At the 10-year mark, the whole unit gets replaced. Read the date stamped on the back when you take it down. A 2015 unit installed in 2026 has zero usable life left even if it looks new. While you have it down, this is also a great moment to add or upgrade your fire extinguisher setup."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-22T14:14:49.373Z","published":"2026-05-22T14:12:42.889Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}