When and Where are Wildfires Most Common in the U.S.? Jack Beckwith, Michael Hester, and Tyler Wolf

It’s been a recording-setting year for wildfire activity, especially in California. First, the Mendocino Complex Fire consumed over 459,000 acres between July and September 2018, becoming the largest recorded fire in the state’s history. Then, just a few months later, the Woolsey Fire and Camp Fire emerged in opposite corners of California, the latter of which has already claimed the lives of 81 people and destroyed over 17,000 structures. It flattened almost the entire town of Paradise, a retirement haven in Northern California home to nearly 26,000. California has suffered the brunt of U.S. wildfire destruction in 2018. But historically, states like Alaska and Idaho have also been on the receiving end of massive wildfires that wreak havoc on local communities. According to data compiled by U.S. Forest Service, both states saw more of their acreage burned at the hands of wildfires than California between 1992 and 2015. To get a better understanding of the areas of the country most susceptible to wildfire damage, we’ve created the following map using the U.S. Forest Service’s data. It shows the share of each county’s acreage that’s been burned by wildfires since 1992.

Where Wildfires Start in the U.S. % of acres touched by wildfires, 1992 - 2015

The data mapped above encompass over 1.88 million wildfires across a 24-year period, compiled with information from federal, state and local fire organizations. And while most of the wildfires in the data are small — over 85% burned fewer than 10 acres — they still account for more than 140 million acres burned collectively. The data tell us not only where fires are happening, but when they’re happening as well. June through August tends to be the high point of wildfire season in most years nationally. The only recent year in which the peak month didn’t fall within that window was 2011, when a host of wildfires in Texas caused Governor Rick Perry to declare 252 counties as disaster areas.

Peak Wildfire Season is in the Summer Seasonality of Wildfires in the U.S., 1992 - 2015

Analyzing wildfire trends at the state level presents a slightly more nuanced picture. Between 1992 and 2015, more acres burned across the U.S. in June than any other month. That was driven largely by wildfire activity in Alaska, where over 20 million acres were consumed in June alone. Other states follow more distinctive patterns. Florida, for instance, has seen several of its largest fires over the past two decades in May, while fires in Oklahoma has seen the most destruction in March. Between 1992 and 2015, only 16 states saw acreage burned actually peak in June, July, or August.

Peak Wildfire Season Still Varies by State Percent of Acres Burned by Month, 1992 - 2015