Flame-retardant fabrics for contract work must meet specific code-based standards — most commonly NFPA 701 for drapery and Cal TB 117-2013 or BS 5852 for upholstery — and the only fabrics that reliably pass inspection are either inherently FR (Trevira CS, modacrylic, FR polyester, wool) or topically treated with a certified, durable finish backed by a current test report. If you're sourcing hotels, theaters, hospitals, or transit, the fabric itself isn't enough; you need the right test certificate for the right standard, on the right composite assembly.
Most contract specifiers reference one of four standards, and confusing them is the single biggest reason fabric gets rejected on site. Here's what each one actually tests.
NFPA 701 is the US standard for hanging textiles — drapery, curtains, scenery, banners. It's a vertical flame test measuring char length and afterflame time. If a fire marshal walks into a hotel ballroom and asks for paperwork, this is what they want.
California TB 117-2013 replaced the old open-flame TB 117 in 2013 and now only tests for smolder resistance on the cover fabric. It's the baseline for residential upholstery in the US but is often insufficient for true contract work. Many hotel groups still specify the older TB 133 (a full mockup burn test) for lobby seating.
BS 5852 is the UK/EU equivalent for upholstery, with crib ignition sources rated 0 through 7. Contract hospitality typically requires Crib 5 — that's where the fabric, foam, and barrier all need to work together.
IMO FTPC Part 8 applies to marine and cruise applications and is the strictest of the bunch. If you're selling into shipbuilding, nothing else qualifies.

Here's the bottom line: inherently FR fabrics keep their fire performance for the life of the textile. Topically treated ones can lose it after a few washes or dry-clean cycles. For contract jobs that get cleaned regularly — hotels, hospitals, restaurants — this distinction is everything.
These are aftermarket chemical applications — typically phosphorus-based or backcoatings — sprayed or padded onto a finished fabric. They work, but with caveats. Cleaning method matters (most treatments are dry-clean only), and the certificate is only valid for the specific treatment batch. If a client washes drapes in a commercial laundry without telling you, the FR performance can drop below code within five cycles.
For example, a boutique hotel group we worked with originally specified a topically treated cotton velvet for guestroom drapes. After 18 months of in-house laundering, a routine fire marshal inspection failed three properties. The remediation — rehanging Trevira CS replacements across 240 rooms — costs more than the entire original drapery package. Lesson learned.
A test report is only as good as what's printed on it — and mills know how to make a marginal fabric look bulletproof on paper. Look for these specifics before accepting anything.
If you're new to spec sheets in general, our guide on how to read a fabric spec sheet without getting burned walks through the broader anatomy of these documents.

Trevira CS sheers and jacquards dominate this category. Inherent FR polyester blends with FR rayon are the workhorse mid-priced option. Avoid untreated cotton or linen — they'll need topical treatment that won't survive commercial laundering.
Solution-dyed FR polyester, wool/nylon blends (typically 80/20), and Trevira CS upholstery weaves. Heavier 100% wool boucle in 450+ gsm often passes BS 5852 with minimal treatment. Look at our wool fabric collection for contract-grade options.
Inherent FR velour and IFR polyester. Heavy modacrylic blends for blackout drapes. Skip cotton velvet unless you have a permanent FR treatment certified for the venue's cleaning protocol.
This is specialty territory — FR vinyl, FR-treated faux leather, or technical knits from mills that specialize in marine work. Don't improvise here.
FR polyester with antimicrobial finish, or solution-dyed olefin. Must also pass bleach cleanability — a fabric that passes NFPA 701 but degrades after a hydrogen peroxide wipedown is useless in a hospital.
After enough contract installs, the same five mistakes show up over and over. Avoid these and you'll dodge most of the reasons fire marshals issue red tags.

Expect to pay a 20–60% premium over comparable non-FR fabric. Here's the rough lay of the land at wholesale volumes (500+ yards):
The temptation is always to chase the lower end. Don't — at least not without verifying the full test package. A $7/yd “FR” polyester with a single-page in-house test report will almost certainly come back to bite you. We covered this dynamic in detail in the hidden costs of cheap wholesale fabric, and FR is where those hidden costs hit hardest.
For a real example: a contract workroom in Texas saved roughly $8,400 on a 600-yard drapery order by switching from Trevira CS to a treated polyester. The remediation cost after the project failed inspection — including tear-down, restocking, expedited replacement fabric, and crew time — totaled just over $61,000.
The smoothest FR projects follow a clear paper trail. Build this into your sourcing process from day one.
For contract workrooms also handling complex yardage planning, our breakdown of how to calculate fabric yardage pairs well with this workflow when budgeting FR materials, which carry less forgiveness for over-ordering due to their price.

The short version: never accept FR claims without a current, third-party, accredited test report tied to the exact specimen you're buying. Spec the right standard for the application, prefer inherent FR over topical treatments wherever the budget allows, and document everything for the file.
If you're sourcing for a hospitality, healthcare, theater, or transit project and want to see contract-grade options vetted for these standards, browse our contract sofa fabrics, wool collection, and heavyweight canvas range — or reach out to our team at Global Fabric Wholesale for current FR test packages and bulk pricing on inherent FR polyester, Trevira CS, and treated specialty wovens. We'd rather quote you the right fabric the first time than help you remediate the wrong one.