The AHA’s 3-minute rule was designed with a single-floor building in mind: a bystander runs down a hallway, grabs the AED, runs back. Add stairs, elevators, locked stairwells, and 30-story floor counts, and the math collapses. A unit placed on the ground floor of a 25-story office tower is effectively unreachable from the 20th floor — not even close to 3 minutes.
This guide gives facility managers, safety officers, and building owners a working framework for vertical AED coverage: how to model travel time across floors, where to place units in stairwells vs. lobbies, and how building code (NFPA, IBC, ADA) shapes the answer. Every coverage rule here ties back to the AED Quantity Calculator for site-specific planning.
The vertical coverage problem
Travel time in a single-floor building is roughly linear: distance ÷ walking speed = time. Add floors, and you introduce four new variables:
- Vertical transit method (stairs vs. elevator)
- Wait time for an elevator to arrive at the correct floor
- Locked stairwell egress (re-entry restrictions in some buildings)
- Floor-to-floor walking + stair-climbing speed difference
~90
secAverage elevator wait + travel time per floor in a 20-story office buildingSource: Otis Elevator field timing data + NFPA 130 elevator standards
The vertical coverage formula
To plan multi-floor AED coverage, model total response time using this practical formula:
Response time = recognition (45s) + retrieval call (15s) + vertical transit + horizontal walk + return trip
Vertical transit estimates (round-trip)
| Method | Speed (round-trip) | Realistic per-floor time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walking on a level floor | ~3.5 ft/sec | — | Baseline benchmark |
| Stairs — climbing up | ~2.0 ft/sec | 20–25 sec/floor | Slower with an AED in hand |
| Stairs — descending | ~2.5 ft/sec | 15–18 sec/floor | Faster but riskier |
| Elevator (waiting + travel) | Variable | 30–90 sec/floor | Depends on the call wait |
| Express elevator (high-rise) | 1,000+ ft/min | 10–15 sec/floor | Above floor 30 only |
Quick rule of thumb: stairs are usually faster than elevators for a 1–4 floor difference. Elevators win only at 5+ floor differences if the elevator is already on your floor when you call.
How many floors can one AED cover?
Using the 3-minute total budget and the vertical math above:
| Building type | Floors covered per AED | Placement strategy |
|---|---|---|
| 2-story low-rise | 2 floors | 1 AED on the entry level near the stairwell |
| 3–5 story mid-rise | 2–3 floors | 1 on ground + 1 on top floor OR 1 on middle floor |
| 6–10 story building | 2 floors per AED | 1 on every other floor near the stairwell |
| 11–25 story high-rise | 2 floors per AED | 1 on every 2nd floor + 1 in lobby + 1 on amenity floor |
| 25+ story super-tall | 2 floors per AED | Coverage every 2 floors + 1 per sky lobby + 1 per mechanical floor |
The “every 2 floors” baseline is a conservative target endorsed by the OSHA Best Practices Guide for high-occupancy buildings. Some operators stretch to 3 floors per AED in budget-constrained portfolios — acceptable only if all stairwells are unlocked, and elevators are reliably fast.
Best placement zones per floor
Within a given floor, the AED should sit where the most people pass it and where rapid stairwell access is possible:
1. Near the stairwell exit (preferred)
A bystander running up from below can grab the AED on the floor just below the emergency and ascend the last flight — typically faster than waiting for an elevator. Mount within 20 feet of the stairwell door.
2. Near the elevator lobby (alternative)
If stairwells are locked for egress-only access, place units in the elevator lobby instead. Verify the elevator’s typical wait time during peak hours before relying on this.
3. At the reception or security desk (lobby floor)
The lobby-floor AED serves the highest-occupancy zone and is the unit a 911 caller can direct EMS to. Always include one here.
4. Amenity floors (gym, pool, conference)
Higher-risk zones (gym = exertion; pool = drowning + cardiac events) require dedicated units regardless of floor proximity to other AEDs.
Stairwell-mounted AEDs: yes or no?
Some building owners install AEDs inside stairwells. The argument: stair landings sit between two floors, and someone running up from below grabs the unit mid-ascent. The downside: stairwell temperature swings (cold in winter, hot in summer), restricted ventilation, and reduced visibility.
Best practice from the NFPA 170 (Standard for Fire Safety and Emergency Symbols) approach: place the AED in the hallway adjacent to the stairwell entry, not inside the stairwell itself. Maintain consistent climate control and visibility.
Building code intersections
Three code frameworks shape multi-floor AED placement:
ADA — Mounting accessibility
Per ADA §308, the AED cabinet’s operating handle must sit 48–54 inches above the floor for wheelchair-accessible reach. Cabinets above 60 inches violate ADA reach standards.
IBC / NFPA 1 — Fire egress paths
The AED cannot block a designated fire egress path or reduce the required corridor width. Mount flush in alcoves or recessed walls where possible.
State law & local AHJ — Permit requirements
Several states (NY, NJ, IL, CA) require AED registration with the local AHJ. High-rise buildings > 75 feet often have additional fire/life-safety permits where AED placement is documented.
Real-world model
A 22-story Manhattan office building
For a 22-story office tower with two passenger elevators and four stairwells: place AEDs on floors 1 (lobby), 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, plus one each in the amenity floor (typically floor 2 or 3) and the building gym. That’s 8 units covering ~150,000 sq ft of vertical real estate — every floor reachable within ~90 seconds of round-trip stairwell ascent.
Verify your building with the AED Quantity Calculator.
Special cases: hospitals, hotels, mixed-use towers
Hospitals
Hospital AEDs follow different rules — typically one per nursing unit, plus crash carts in clinical areas. Public-access AEDs in lobbies and family waiting areas follow the multi-floor framework above.
Hotels
Hotels combine guest floors with high-traffic amenity floors (gym, pool, ballroom). Standard placement: lobby, gym, pool deck, plus one per 5–8 guest floors based on tower height.
Mixed-use residential + retail
Treat retail levels (high traffic, public access) and residential levels (lower density, slower response) differently. Retail floors need denser AED coverage; residential can stretch to 3–4 floors per AED.
Who should buy/use this approach?
This framework fits:
- Office tower facility managers are planning a building-wide rollout
- Hotel and resort operations directors
- Hospital and medical-office building risk managers
- Mixed-use developers documenting safety compliance
- Property managers for residential condo/apartment buildings
- Architects and design-build firms in pre-construction AED planning
Frequently Asked Questions
How many floors can a single AED realistically cover?
Approximately 2 floors per AED in standard mid-rise and high-rise buildings, assuming unlocked stairwells and a healthy responder. Stretching to 3 floors is acceptable only with reliable express elevators or unusually small floor footprints.
Are stairs or elevators faster for AED retrieval?
Stairs are typically faster for a 1–4 floor difference. Elevators win only for 5+ floors if the elevator is already on your floor when called. Build vertical coverage assuming worst-case elevator wait times.
Should I mount AEDs inside stairwells?
Best practice per NFPA guidance is to mount in the hallway directly adjacent to the stairwell door, not inside the stairwell. Stairwells have temperature swings and reduced visibility.
What ADA rules apply to AED cabinet mounting?
The cabinet’s operating handle must be between 48–54 inches above the finished floor per ADA §308 reach standards. Cabinets above 60 inches are non-compliant.
Does my high-rise need to register every AED with the city?
Most states require registration with the state Department of Health or local EMS. Cities with high-rise fire codes (NYC, Chicago, Boston) often require additional documentation as part of life-safety filings.
Where do most AED responses fail in tall buildings?
The two most common failures: (1) locked stairwells with restricted re-entry that force a rescuer back to an elevator, and (2) AED cabinet placement on a floor without adequate signage, so the responder can’t locate the unit when they arrive.
Sources & References
- American Heart Association — Public Access Defibrillation Resources
- OSHA — Cardiac Arrest & AEDs in the Workplace Best Practices Guide
- U.S. Access Board — ADA Standards for Accessible Design
- NFPA 170 — Standard for Fire Safety and Emergency Symbols
- International Code Council — International Building Code (IBC)
Disclaimer: Building codes and AED rules vary by jurisdiction. Consult a licensed fire-protection engineer and your local Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) before installation.