Vector Fire matches commercial properties across Northeast Houston — Humble, Kingwood, Atascocita, Porter, New Caney, Crosby, and the Lake Houston area — with vetted, licensed fire alarm contractors. The NE corridor mixes fast-growing retail and multifamily with established medical and industrial along US-59 and FM 1960. We connect you with a contractor who knows the local jurisdiction. Matching is free, with no obligation.
Northeast Houston is one of the metro's trickiest areas for jurisdiction, because four different authorities can apply within a few miles. Kingwood was annexed by the City of Houston in 1996, so despite feeling like its own community it falls under the City of Houston Fire Prevention Bureau (832-394-8800) for permits and inspections. Humble is its own incorporated city with its own fire marshal. Atascocita and Crosby are unincorporated Harris County, reviewed by the Harris County Fire Marshal (713-755-4626) with response from the local Emergency Services Districts. And Porter and New Caney sit across the line in Montgomery County (936-760-6800).
That patchwork is exactly why "who do I file with?" is the first question on any Northeast Houston project — and why matching you with a contractor who already works your specific jurisdiction matters. Filing Kingwood plans with Harris County instead of the City of Houston, for example, is a common and avoidable cause of a stalled permit. Across all of Northeast Houston, commercial fire alarm systems follow NFPA 72 — annual inspection for most components, semi-annual for certain devices and occupancies — with plan review and acceptance testing generally scheduled about 5–10 business days out.
Northeast Houston is a fast-growing mix of retail, residential, and industrial along the US-59/I-69 and FM 1960 corridors. We match you to a contractor who does your property type:
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Kingwood falls under the City of Houston Fire Prevention Bureau (832-394-8800), not Harris County — it was annexed by the City of Houston in 1996. This catches a lot of property owners off guard; filing Kingwood plans with Harris County is a common cause of a stalled permit. A contractor who works Kingwood files with the City of Houston from the start.
It varies by a few miles: the City of Houston Fire Prevention Bureau (Kingwood), the City of Humble (Humble), the Harris County Fire Marshal and local ESDs (Atascocita, Crosby), and the Montgomery County Fire Marshal (Porter, New Caney). Matching with a contractor who already works your specific authority avoids filing with the wrong office.
Under NFPA 72, most commercial fire alarm components are inspected and tested annually, with certain devices and occupancies (and healthcare facilities) on a semi-annual cadence — regardless of which Northeast Houston jurisdiction you're in.
The fire code requirements (NFPA 72/NFPA 101) are consistent, but Porter and New Caney are in Montgomery County, so permits and acceptance inspections go through the Montgomery County Fire Marshal (936-760-6800) rather than Harris County or the City of Houston.
No. Vector Fire is a referral service — we match you with a vetted, licensed fire alarm contractor who works Northeast Houston and knows the local jurisdiction. We don't perform the work and don't profit from it, so the match is unbiased. Matching is free, with no obligation.
Tell us your property and city and we'll connect you with a vetted, licensed contractor who works Northeast Houston and knows the local jurisdiction. We don't perform the work, so the match is unbiased. Free, with no obligation.