Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025

Martyn's Law for village halls

A village hall is often run by volunteers and hired out by the hour, yet a packed quiz night, panto or wedding can take it well over 200 people. Martyn's Law applies based on that maximum, not the average booking.

Does Martyn's Law apply to your village hall?

Martyn's Law applies to premises that can hold 200 people or more. The figure that matters is your maximum capacity — the most people who could be on site at once — not a typical day.

For a village hall, that usually means thinking about:

  • Bookings run by outside organisers who won't know your evacuation routes unless you've written them down.
  • Seasonal peaks — the village fête, the Christmas panto — that fill the hall far beyond a typical hire.
  • A committee of volunteers, not a security team, responsible for keeping people safe.

Not sure which side of the line you're on? The free checker gives you a straight answer in about a minute — no account needed.

What you'll need to do

If your village hall is standard tier (200–799 capacity), the good news is the requirements are practical and low-cost. The Home Office has confirmed you don't need to buy specialist security services. It comes down to:

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A Public Protection Procedure

A written plan for what your team would do in an emergency — evacuation, moving people to safety inside, lockdown, and how you'd communicate.

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Staff and volunteer awareness

Everyone working at your village hall should understand the procedure and their part in it. No security background needed.

Records that prove you're ready

Keep your procedure, training logs and drill records together, so you can show a regulator you've done what's required.

How Verith helps your village hall

Verith is built specifically for standard-tier venues like yours. You walk your village hall with your phone, photographing your exits, assembly points and key areas. Verith turns that into a complete Public Protection Procedure you can download, share with your team and hand to an inspector.

From there you log staff training and drills in the same place — so everything you need to prove compliance lives in one tidy record. Most venues are ready in about a week.

Frequently asked questions

Does Martyn's Law apply to my village hall?

Martyn's Law applies to premises that can hold 200 or more people. Because it's based on your maximum capacity — including busy periods, functions and events — many village halls are in scope even if a typical day is quieter. You can check in about a minute with the free Verith eligibility checker.

What does a standard-tier village hall have to do?

Standard-tier venues need a written Public Protection Procedure, staff who understand it, and records showing they're prepared. The Home Office has confirmed standard-tier venues can comply without buying specialist security services.

Do I need to hire a consultant?

No. Standard-tier compliance is designed to be achievable without consultants. Verith guides you through your procedure, staff training and drills step by step — most venues are ready within a week.

When does Martyn's Law come into force?

The Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025 received Royal Assent in April 2025, and enforcement is expected to begin no earlier than spring 2027 — so there's time to prepare now.

Get your village hall ready for Martyn's Law

Check if it applies, then build your Public Protection Procedure with a guided photo walkaround. No consultants, no jargon — most venues are compliant within a week.

No card needed · 14-day free trial · Made for standard-tier venues

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