Martyn’s Law – officially the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025 – is new UK legislation designed to improve public safety by ensuring certain venues and events that welcome members of the public are better prepared to respond to a terrorist incident. The law was passed on 3rd April 2025 and is now in a minimum 24-month implementation period, meaning requirements are unlikely to become enforceable before mid-2027.
Why Was Martyn’s Law Created?
Martyn’s Law follows the Manchester Arena Inquiry Reports and aims to create more consistent, proportionate public safety measures across the UK. The Government’s goal is to improve preparedness without imposing disproportionate burdens on organisations.
It’s core aims are to:
Improve how prepared venues are for major incidents
Reduce harm and save lives
Encourage proportionate, practical planning rather than intensive security measures
Does Martyn’s Law Apply to My Business?
This can be an area of misunderstanding – so let’s keep it simple.
Martyn’s Law applies only if your premises or event meets one of these capacity thresholds:
Standard Tier: 200 – 799 people expected at any one time
Enhanced Tier: 800+ people expected at any one time
What This Means for Businesses
Most small shops, cafes, salons, pubs, restaurants, food trucks, and micro-venues will fall below the 200-person capacity and therefore will not have legal duties under Martyn’s Law.
However, larger venues – such as busy pubs, markets, leisure centres, sizeable office buildings, shopping centres, and event spaces – may be in scope.
What Will I Need to Do?
Your legal responsibilities depend on which tier you fall into.
Establish basic, low-cost safety procedures, including: – Evacuation – Invacuation (moving people to a safer place inside) – Lockdown – Communication procedures for alerting staff and customers
Importantly: there is NO requirement for physical security measures in the Standard Tier.
For Enhanced Tier:
In addition to Standard Tier steps, you must:
Consider and implement appropriate measures to reduce vulnerability, such as: – Monitoring (e.g. CCTV) – Movement control – Bag checks – Physical security
Document your plans
Appoint a responsible person
Do I Need to Act Now?
Legal duties won’t apply immediately while the law is phased in, but it’s sensible to start preparing by:
Reviewing your current emergency plans
Thinking about how people access and move through your site
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