Blog

  /  

Electric Fireplace Safety: Essential Tips for Homeowners

Electric Fireplace Safety: Essential Tips for Homeowners

Electric fireplaces have changed what “safe heat” can look like at home. No real flame. No carbon monoxide. No flue collecting soot above a child’s bedroom. That is why they turn up in nurseries, apartments, studios and guest rooms that would never pass a wood or gas install.

This guide walks through the handful of rules that keep that safety promise intact.

Published:
· Updated:

Loading image...

thumbnail: webimage-Switch-80SS-Electric-FireplaceSwitch 80SS - Commercial Space CGI

Are electric fireplaces safe? The short answer

Electric fireplaces are among the safest home heating options because they produce no real flame, no combustion byproducts, and no carbon monoxide, provided they sit on the right dedicated circuit, keep clear of combustibles, and run according to manufacturer guidance.

That last clause is the whole article. The technology removes the headline risks that come with wood and gas: there is nothing burning, nothing venting, and nothing emitting. EcoSmart Electric units use LED light banks behind a toughened glass screen to create the flame effect, with a separate fan-forced heating element when warmth is wanted. The fire you see is light. The heat you feel is a discrete component you can turn off independently. What follows is the short list of "provided that" clauses every owner should commit to memory, organised so you can scan the section that applies to your situation.

The safety certifications to look for, and what they mean

The single most useful thing a homeowner can do before buying any electric heater is to check the rating plate for a third-party certification mark. According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, portable electric heaters were involved in roughly 1,700 fires a year between 2017 and 2019, and uncertified units are over-represented in those statistics.

EcoSmart Electric models, including the Switch and Motion ranges, carry both ETL and CSA certifications. They are tested and listed to CSA C22.1 (the Canadian Electrical Code) and ANSI/NFPA 70 (the U.S. National Electrical Code). In homeowner terms:

Certification

What it covers

Why it matters to you

ETL (Intertek)

Independent electrical safety testing for North America

Equivalent to UL; building inspectors recognise either mark

CSA

Canadian Standards Association listing

Required for sale in Canada; signals tested electrical integrity

CSA C22.1 / ANSI/NFPA 70

Wiring and installation standards

Confirms the unit is designed to be wired the way North American code expects

ETL and UL run identical testing protocols and differ only in administrative structure, which is why inspectors treat them as interchangeable. The other physical safety layer on every Switch and Motion unit, easy to overlook in the spec sheet, is the toughened glass fire screen. It is the same glass family used in safety-rated balustrades. It is far more impact-resistant than ordinary glass, and during normal flame-only operation it stays cool to the touch.

Loading image...

thumbnail: webimage-CertificationsCertifications

Electrical requirements: dedicated circuit, no extension cords

EcoSmart Electric fireplaces require a dedicated 20 A circuit. That is the rule. Whether the unit is hardwired or plugged into a wall outlet, the circuit it sits on should not be shared with another high-draw appliance, and it should never be extended.

Both the Switch and Motion ranges are dual voltage. At 120 V they pull 1,500 W and produce 5,000 BTU/h (1.5 kW). At 240 V they pull 3,000 W and produce 10,000 BTU/h (2.9 kW). Either way, sustained 1,500 W draw is exactly the load that overwhelms household extension cords, surge strips, and shared outlets. Heat builds up inside the cord, the insulation softens, and the failure mode is fire. This is the single most common preventable cause of heater fires in residential settings.

Never plug an electric fireplace into:

  • An extension cord, even a heavy-gauge one

  • A power strip or surge protector

  • A circuit shared with a microwave, dishwasher, dryer, or other high-draw appliance

  • A daisy-chained outlet adapter

Clearances: how much space your fireplace really needs

Two clearance numbers cover almost every install. Keep at least 3 ft (0.9 m) of clear space at the front, sides, and rear of the unit, and leave a minimum 180 mm (7 in) of floor clearance underneath for airflow on wall-mounted or recessed installations.

The 3 ft rule applies to combustibles: curtains, upholstered furniture, bookshelves, bedding, throw rugs, dried flowers, holiday décor. None of these should sit inside the keep-out zone when the heat function is running. The 180 mm floor clearance is the one most homeowners miss because it isn't mentioned on the rating plate. It exists to keep cool air moving into the intake at the base of the unit. Block it with a built-in cabinet kickplate, a tight skirting profile, or a deep-pile rug pushed flush against the wall, and you starve the heater of intake air. The thermal shutoff will trip, which is the system working, but it's a preventable trip.

A note on the phrase "zero-clearance," which causes regular confusion. EcoSmart Electric units are zero-clearance for framing, meaning the body of the unit sits flush against standard wood or metal stud walls without a structural air gap. That is a framing spec, not a furnishing spec. The keep-out zone in front of and around the glass is a separate rule and is not relaxed by the zero-clearance framing rating.

Vents are the other clearance to watch. Don't drape towels, blankets, holiday stockings, or laundry across the top or bottom vents at any time, even when the unit is off. People forget, the heat comes on by remote, and the fabric scorches.

Overheat protection and what to do if the alarm sounds

Every EcoSmart Electric unit has automatic thermal shutoff. If the heating element exceeds a safe operating temperature, usually because of a blocked vent or dust buildup in the intake, the unit cuts power to the heater before damage occurs. The flame effect may continue or shut down depending on the model, but the heat is what matters.

The reset procedure differs by range:

Range

Alarm style

Reset wait

Action

Switch

Audible and visual overheat alarm

5 minutes

Switch breaker off, wait 5 minutes, vacuum the vents to clear dust or lint, restore power

Motion

Silent shutoff

15 minutes

Switch breaker off, wait 15 minutes, clear the vents, restore power

If the same fault repeats after a reset, stop and call EcoSmart support. A persistent shutdown isn't dust. It's usually a clearance or airflow problem that needs eyes on it.

One first-use quirk worth mentioning so you don't panic. The Motion range can produce a faint odour during its first heat cycle as the heating element burns off manufacturing residue. That is normal and clears within the first hour or two of use. It is not the same as the unit smelling of hot plastic during ongoing operation, which would warrant a call to support.

After the heat function has been running at high output, give the glass a few minutes to cool before touching or cleaning it. The flame effect alone produces minimal glass-surface heat -- enough to feel warm but not enough to burn; the heat element is the variable.

Indoor or outdoor? The Switch versus Motion distinction

The Switch range is approved for outdoor use under a patio cover or overhang. The Motion range is indoor only. That distinction is unique among electric fireplaces at this design tier and worth understanding before you specify a model.

Indoor (sealed, climate-controlled)

Outdoor under cover (patio, overhang, alfresco)

Fully exposed outdoor

Switch

Approved

Approved

Not approved

Motion

Approved

Not approved

Not approved

"Under cover" means the unit is protected from direct rain, snow, and standing moisture by a permanent roof or overhang. It is not the same as weatherproof. A pergola with slats is not under cover. A patio roof with gutters is. A common-sense way to think about it: if a piece of unsealed timber furniture would be ruined where the fireplace is going, the location isn't under cover.

The other moisture rule applies to both ranges. Don't run an electric fireplace near flammable vapours, including paint, solvents, or fuels, and don't install one in a damp basement that lacks dehumidification. Outdoor electric fireplaces are best understood as ambience and shoulder-season warmth, not winter heating for an exposed terrace. That is what infrared radiant heaters are for, and the two technologies complement each other rather than substitute.

Child and pet safety around an electric fireplace

The reasons electric is family-friendlier than wood or gas are structural. No open flame to fall into. No combustion byproducts to inhale. No spark risk, no ember risk, no flue collecting creosote three floors above the kids' bedroom. That is genuinely a different category of home product, and it is why electric is the most commonly recommended choice for first-time parents over almost any other heat source.

That said, the glass screen still gets warm during heat-mode operation, and the unit is still drawing serious current. Basic household rules:

  • Supervise small children within arm's reach of the glass while the heat function is running

  • Use flame-only mode when toddlers or pets are in the room unattended, so there is no surface heat at all

  • Route the supply cord (for plug-in installs) where pets can't chew it

  • Engage the remote's child-lock if your model includes one, so a curious toddler can't bring the heat on while you're out of the room

Daily-use habits that keep your fireplace safe long-term

Owning an electric fireplace well is mostly a question of small habits. None of these are dramatic, and none take more than a minute.

  1. Daily. When you switch the heater off for the night, leave the flame effect on if you like the look. Both Switch and Motion units draw between 42 and 71 W in flame-only mode. No combustion, no heat, no concern about unattended use overnight.

  2. Weekly: Wipe the glass with a soft dry cloth. Don't spray cleaners directly onto the unit.

  3. Monthly during heating season: Vacuum the intake and outlet vents to clear lint, dust, and the inevitable pet hair. This is the single highest-leverage maintenance task; most thermal-shutoff trips trace back to a dusty vent.

  4. As required. If the unit smells unusual during operation, smokes, or trips the breaker repeatedly, stop using it and contact EcoSmart support. Do not attempt internal repair.

The safety summary, and where to go next

Four anchor rules cover almost everything in this article. Buy a unit with a recognised certification mark (ETL or CSA, ideally both). Wire it to a dedicated 20 A circuit and never use an extension cord. Keep 3 ft (0.9 m) of clearance from combustibles and 180 mm (7 in) of floor clearance for airflow. Use the Switch range if the install is under-cover outdoor; use the Motion range if it's indoor.

Follow those four rules and you have one of the few heating products that can live in a nursery, a guest bedroom, a sealed studio apartment, or a covered terrace without the compromises a flame would impose. The whole point of the technology is that it removes the historic objections to indoor fire, and the rules above are what protect that promise. If you haven't selected a unit yet, the broader electric fireplaces range is a good starting point; if you have, the installation and maintenance articles in this cluster cover the next steps.

References

Related Articles

Electric Fireplaces

Electric Fireplace Buying Guide: Everything You Need to Know

Buying Guides
Electric fireplace buying guide: technology, sizing, voltage, and install tips.

Electric Fireplaces vs Wood Fireplaces

Buying Guides
Compare the pros and cons of electric and wood fireplaces to determine the best option for your home.

Electric Fireplaces for Apartments & Renters: No-Permit, No-Damage Solutions

Buying Guides
Install guide for renters: plug-in, wall-mount, or recessed electric fireplaces.

Electric Fireplace Flame Technology Explained: LED, 3D, Holographic & Motion Picture

Technology
LED, holographic, water vapour & screen-based electric fireplace flame tech explained.

TV Above the Electric Fireplace: Design Strategies, Height & Heat Considerations

Others
Design strategies for mounting a TV above an electric fireplace safely.

Electric Fireplaces for Hotels & Commercial Spaces: Design, Safety & Compliance

Design Trends
Hotel electric fireplaces: design, safety, compliance, and cost overview.

Switch vs. Motion Electric Fireplaces: Which EcoSmart Fire Collection Is Right for You?

Buying Guides
Compare EcoSmart Fire Switch vs Motion on flame, environment and recess depth.

Electric Fireplace Accent Wall Ideas: Stone, Tile, Timber & Texture Combinations

Design Trends
Stone, tile, timber and plaster accent wall ideas for electric fireplaces.

How Long Do Electric Fireplaces Last? Lifespan, Durability & What to Expect

Buying Guides
How long electric fireplaces last, what wears out, and how to extend lifespan.