This information covers fires, false alarms and other incidents attended by fire crews, and the statistics include the numbers of incidents, fires, fatalities and casualties as well as information on response times to fires. The Home Office also collect information on the workforce, fire prevention work, health and safety and firefighter pensions. All data tables on fire statistics are below.
The Home Office has responsibility for fire services in England. The vast majority of data tables produced by the Home Office are for England but some (0101, 0103, 0201, 0501, 1401) tables are for Great Britain split by nation. In the past the Department for Communities and Local Government (who previously had responsibility for fire services in England) produced data tables for Great Britain and at times the UK. Similar information for devolved administrations are available at https://www.firescotland.gov.uk/about/statistics/" class="govuk-link">Scotland: Fire and Rescue Statistics, https://statswales.gov.wales/Catalogue/Community-Safety-and-Social-Inclusion/Community-Safety" class="govuk-link">Wales: Community safety and http://www.nifrs.org/" class="govuk-link">Northern Ireland: Fire and Rescue Statistics.
If you use assistive technology (for example, a screen reader) and need a version of any of these documents in a more accessible format, please email alternativeformats@homeoffice.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.
Fire statistics guidance
Fire statistics incident level datasets
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787aa6c2cca34bdaf58a257/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0101-230125.xlsx">FIRE0101: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 94 KB) Previous FIRE0101 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787ace93f1182a1e258a25c/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0102-230125.xlsx">FIRE0102: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services in England, by incident type and fire and rescue authority (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 1.51 MB) Previous FIRE0102 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b036868b2b1923b64648/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0103-230125.xlsx">FIRE0103: Fires attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 123 KB) Previous FIRE0103 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b3ac868b2b1923b6464d/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0104-230125.xlsx">FIRE0104: Fire false alarms by reason for false alarm, England (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 295 KB) Previous FIRE0104 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b4323f1182a1e258a26a/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0201-230125.xlsx">FIRE0201: Dwelling fires attended by fire and rescue services by motive, population and nation (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 111 KB) <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/fire0201-previous-data-t
Incident-based fire statistics, by type of fire incident, Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon, Canadian Armed Forces, 2005 to 2021.
In 2022, approximately 12.4 percent of accidental house fires that led to fatalities were caused by electrical appliances. Electrical appliances are the most common known cause for deadly house fires, with cigarette and room heater ranking as the second and third most dangerous fire sources, respectively. In more close to 50 percent of cases, the cause of fire outbreak was unknown. During that year, the elderly made up a disproportionate amount of those who died in house fires, indicating a higher vulnerability compared to the average population.
FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (19 September 2024)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66e3ea7461763848f429d63f/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-210923.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities and non-fatal casualties by age gender and type of location (21 September 2023) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 32.5 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/650ac76852e73c001254dbf4/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-290922.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (29 September 2022) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 33 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/63316e13e90e0711cb72b6d4/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-300921.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (30 September 2021) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 41.3 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/61519b2ae90e077a2a6bd16e/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-011020.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (1 October 2020) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 29.5 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5f71d84ad3bf7f47a9cb1633/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-120919.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (12 September 2019) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 18.5 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5d727d3ee5274a09860c1377/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504-060918.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (6 September 2018) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 22.5 KB)
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5b8d35b6ed915d1ed1494ced/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0504.xlsx">FIRE0504: Fatalities from fires by cause of death (12 October 2017) (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 28.5 KB)
Fire statistics data tables
Fire statistics guidance
Fire statistics
This dataset was created by Alyssa Humpal
This statistic shows the number of house fires caused by Christmas trees in the United States from 2000 to 2015. In 2008, a total number of about 240 fires were counted.
Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This information covers fires, false and other incidents attended by firecrews, and the statistics include the numbers of incidents, fires, fatalities and casualties as well as information on response times to fires.
The Home Office has responsibility for fire services in England. In the past the Department for Communities and Local Government (who previously had responsibility for fire services in England) produced data tables for Great Britain and at times the UK. Similar information for devolved administrations are available at Scotland: Fire and Rescue Statistics, Wales: Community safety and Northern Ireland: Fire and Rescue Statistics (see Landing Page for links).
In 2021, there were 3,800 civilian deaths caused by fires in the United States. This is an increase from the previous year, where there were 3,500 civilian deaths caused by fires in the country.
Incident-based fire statistics, by type of casualty, age group of casualty, status of casualty and type of structure, Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, Yukon, Canadian Armed Forces, 2005 to 2021.
There were 309 fire-related fatalities in Great Britain in the 2023/24 reporting year, a decline on the previous reporting year when there were 323. In the early 2000s, the annual number of fire fatalities was consistently over 500, with numbers gradually falling throughout that decade. In 2011/12 the number of fatalities related to fire fell below 400 for the first time, and has remained below 400 since that point. Incidents rise as workforce shrinks Although there has been a net decrease in the number of incidents attended by fire and rescue services since the early 2010s, the current trend from 2014/15 onwards has been one of increase. In 2022/23, there were 759,456 incidents attended by the fire service, which was the most in a reporting year since 2010/11. Like many other public services, the fire service cut significant numbers of staff during the 2010s, with the number of fire and rescue workers in England falling by around 10,000 between 2008 and 2018. In a similar time period, expenditure on fire-protection services in the UK was cut from 3.11 billion in 2009/10, to just 2.72 billion in 2018/19. Workplace fatalities also declining The fall in fire-related fatalities since the 1980s is evidence that the UK has become an increasingly safe society in recent decades. The significant fall in workplace deaths is also evidence of this, with fatal injuries at work declining from 651 in 1974 to just 135 by 2023. Injuries to workers have also fallen, with incidents almost halving between 2000/01 and 2022/23. The large shift from more dangerous jobs in manufacturing, production, and agriculture to service-orientated roles also certainly play a role in this decline as well.
These statistics are sourced from the Home Office’s online Incident Recording System (IRS), which fire and rescue services (FRSs) complete for every incident they attend, be it a fire, a false alarm or a non-fire incident.
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
A digital record of all Tesla fires - including cars and other products, e.g. Tesla MegaPacks - that are corroborated by news articles or confirmed primary sources. Latest version hosted at https://www.tesla-fire.com.
This statistic shows the amount of direct property damage caused by house fires due to burning Christmas trees in the United States from 2000 to 2015. In 2008, the direct property damage amounted to 25.2 million U.S. dollars.
There were 373 deaths caused by fires in Germany in 2022. This is less than half the amount of fire fatalities in 1990, with 787 deaths recorded that year. This timeline shows the number of fire-related deaths in Germany from 1990 to 2022.
This statistic shows the average annual number of house fires caused by burning Christmas trees in the United States from 2011 to 2015, by area of origin. During that time, an annual average of 70 fires started in the living room.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
San Jose Fire Incidents data:The data set contains San Jose Fire Incidents data from 2015 to present. Data is grouped by year
This layer presents detectable thermal activity from VIIRS satellites for the last 7 days. VIIRS Thermal Hotspots and Fire Activity is a product of NASA’s Land, Atmosphere Near real-time Capability for EOS (LANCE) Earth Observation Data, part of NASA's Earth Science Data.Consumption Best Practices:
As a service that is subject to very high usage, ensure peak performance and accessibility of your maps and apps by avoiding the use of non-cacheable relative Date/Time field filters. To accommodate filtering events by Date/Time, we suggest using the included "Age" fields that maintain the number of days or hours since a record was created or last modified, compared to the last service update. These queries fully support the ability to cache a response, allowing common query results to be efficiently provided to users in a high demand service environment.When ingesting this service in your applications, avoid using POST requests whenever possible. These requests can compromise performance and scalability during periods of high usage because they too are not cacheable.Source: NASA LANCE - VNP14IMG_NRT active fire detection - WorldScale/Resolution: 375-meterUpdate Frequency: Hourly using the aggregated live feed methodologyArea Covered: WorldWhat can I do with this layer?This layer represents the most frequently updated and most detailed global remotely sensed wildfire information. Detection attributes include time, location, and intensity. It can be used to track the location of fires from the recent past, a few hours up to seven days behind real time. This layer also shows the location of wildfire over the past 7 days as a time-enabled service so that the progress of fires over that timeframe can be reproduced as an animation.The VIIRS thermal activity layer can be used to visualize and assess wildfires worldwide. However, it should be noted that this dataset contains many “false positives” (e.g., oil/natural gas wells or volcanoes) since the satellite will detect any large thermal signal.Fire points in this service are generally available within 3 1/4 hours after detection by a VIIRS device. LANCE estimates availability at around 3 hours after detection, and esri livefeeds updates this feature layer every 15 minutes from LANCE.Even though these data display as point features, each point in fact represents a pixel that is >= 375 m high and wide. A point feature means somewhere in this pixel at least one "hot" spot was detected which may be a fire.VIIRS is a scanning radiometer device aboard the Suomi NPP, NOAA-20, and NOAA-21 satellites that collects imagery and radiometric measurements of the land, atmosphere, cryosphere, and oceans in several visible and infrared bands. The VIIRS Thermal Hotspots and Fire Activity layer is a livefeed from a subset of the overall VIIRS imagery, in particular from NASA's VNP14IMG_NRT active fire detection product. The downloads are automatically downloaded from LANCE, NASA's near real time data and imagery site, every 15 minutes.The 375-m data complements the 1-km Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Thermal Hotspots and Fire Activity layer; they both show good agreement in hotspot detection but the improved spatial resolution of the 375 m data provides a greater response over fires of relatively small areas and provides improved mapping of large fire perimeters.Attribute informationLatitude and Longitude: The center point location of the 375 m (approximately) pixel flagged as containing one or more fires/hotspots.Satellite: Whether the detection was picked up by the Suomi NPP satellite (N) or NOAA-20 satellite (1) or NOAA-21 satellite (2). For best results, use the virtual field WhichSatellite, redefined by an arcade expression, that gives the complete satellite name.Confidence: The detection confidence is a quality flag of the individual hotspot/active fire pixel. This value is based on a collection of intermediate algorithm quantities used in the detection process. It is intended to help users gauge the quality of individual hotspot/fire pixels. Confidence values are set to low, nominal and high. Low confidence daytime fire pixels are typically associated with areas of sun glint and lower relative temperature anomaly (<15K) in the mid-infrared channel I4. Nominal confidence pixels are those free of potential sun glint contamination during the day and marked by strong (>15K) temperature anomaly in either day or nighttime data. High confidence fire pixels are associated with day or nighttime saturated pixels.Please note: Low confidence nighttime pixels occur only over the geographic area extending from 11 deg E to 110 deg W and 7 deg N to 55 deg S. This area describes the region of influence of the South Atlantic Magnetic Anomaly which can cause spurious brightness temperatures in the mid-infrared channel I4 leading to potential false positive alarms. These have been removed from the NRT data distributed by FIRMS.FRP: Fire Radiative Power. Depicts the pixel-integrated fire radiative power in MW (MegaWatts). FRP provides information on the measured radiant heat output of detected fires. The amount of radiant heat energy liberated per unit time (the Fire Radiative Power) is thought to be related to the rate at which fuel is being consumed (Wooster et. al. (2005)).DayNight: D = Daytime fire, N = Nighttime fireHours Old: Derived field that provides age of record in hours between Acquisition date/time and latest update date/time. 0 = less than 1 hour ago, 1 = less than 2 hours ago, 2 = less than 3 hours ago, and so on.Additional information can be found on the NASA FIRMS site FAQ.Note about near real time data:Near real time data is not checked thoroughly before it's posted on LANCE or downloaded and posted to the Living Atlas. NASA's goal is to get vital fire information to its customers within three hours of observation time. However, the data is screened by a confidence algorithm which seeks to help users gauge the quality of individual hotspot/fire points. Low confidence daytime fire pixels are typically associated with areas of sun glint and lower relative temperature anomaly (<15K) in the mid-infrared channel I4. Medium confidence pixels are those free of potential sun glint contamination during the day and marked by strong (>15K) temperature anomaly in either day or nighttime data. High confidence fire pixels are associated with day or nighttime saturated pixels.RevisionsMarch 7, 2024: Updated to include source data from NOAA-21 Satellite.September 15, 2022: Updated to include 'Hours_Old' field. Time series has been disabled by default, but still available.July 5, 2022: Terms of Use updated to Esri Master License Agreement, no longer stating that a subscription is required!This layer is provided for informational purposes and is not monitored 24/7 for accuracy and currency.If you would like to be alerted to potential issues or simply see when this Service will update next, please visit our Live Feed Status Page!
This statistic shows the number of house fires caused by burning Christmas trees in the United States between 2011 and 2015, by leading cause for the fire. During that time, 30 fires were caused by failure of equipment or heat sources.
The highest number of fire, flames or smoke-related deaths in the United States from 1920 to 2022 was in 1920 with around 9,300 such deaths. This statistic shows the timeline of the number of unintentional-injury-related deaths due to fire, flames, or smoke, in United States from 1920 to 2022.
In 2022, fires in the United States caused property loss of over 18 billion U.S. dollars. This is an increase from the previous year, when fires caused about 15.96 billion U.S. dollars in property loss.
This information covers fires, false alarms and other incidents attended by fire crews, and the statistics include the numbers of incidents, fires, fatalities and casualties as well as information on response times to fires. The Home Office also collect information on the workforce, fire prevention work, health and safety and firefighter pensions. All data tables on fire statistics are below.
The Home Office has responsibility for fire services in England. The vast majority of data tables produced by the Home Office are for England but some (0101, 0103, 0201, 0501, 1401) tables are for Great Britain split by nation. In the past the Department for Communities and Local Government (who previously had responsibility for fire services in England) produced data tables for Great Britain and at times the UK. Similar information for devolved administrations are available at https://www.firescotland.gov.uk/about/statistics/" class="govuk-link">Scotland: Fire and Rescue Statistics, https://statswales.gov.wales/Catalogue/Community-Safety-and-Social-Inclusion/Community-Safety" class="govuk-link">Wales: Community safety and http://www.nifrs.org/" class="govuk-link">Northern Ireland: Fire and Rescue Statistics.
If you use assistive technology (for example, a screen reader) and need a version of any of these documents in a more accessible format, please email alternativeformats@homeoffice.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.
Fire statistics guidance
Fire statistics incident level datasets
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787aa6c2cca34bdaf58a257/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0101-230125.xlsx">FIRE0101: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 94 KB) Previous FIRE0101 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787ace93f1182a1e258a25c/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0102-230125.xlsx">FIRE0102: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services in England, by incident type and fire and rescue authority (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 1.51 MB) Previous FIRE0102 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b036868b2b1923b64648/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0103-230125.xlsx">FIRE0103: Fires attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 123 KB) Previous FIRE0103 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b3ac868b2b1923b6464d/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0104-230125.xlsx">FIRE0104: Fire false alarms by reason for false alarm, England (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 295 KB) Previous FIRE0104 tables
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6787b4323f1182a1e258a26a/fire-statistics-data-tables-fire0201-230125.xlsx">FIRE0201: Dwelling fires attended by fire and rescue services by motive, population and nation (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 111 KB) <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/fire0201-previous-data-t