Building a Wildfire-Resistant Home: Codes and Costs
A new home built to wildfire-resistant codes can be constructed for roughly the same cost as a typical home.
Find tools, maps, charts, and information about wildfire risk for all U.S. communities, counties, tribal areas, and states.
Example land use planning tools for wildfire, including community plans, land development regulations, fire codes, and funding information.
Illustration of the actions needed to make a home wildfire resistant.
Homeowner Brodey Simkins describes the tragedy of losing his home to wildfire and his commitment to rebuilding with wildfire in mind.
A report analyzing the costs of constructing homes to three levels of wildfire resistance in California.
A new home built to wildfire-resistant codes can be constructed for roughly the same cost as a typical home.
A report analyzing the costs of constructing homes to three levels of wildfire resistance in California.
See where wildfire risk intersects social and economic factors that can make it difficult for people to prepare for, respond to, and recover from wildfire.
Almost half of the full community costs of wildfire are paid for at the local level, including homeowners, businesses, and government agencies.
Explore the number of structures destroyed in each state by wildfire. Structures lost—rather than acres burned—provides a more complete measure of the broad impacts of wildfire.
Wildfires are an inescapable and necessary function of healthy ecosystems. In the past decade they have increased in severity and duration, killed more people, and burned more structures.
Leaders from Austin describe how they came to realize the magnitude of the wildfire threat, and how they brought together diverse interests to pass one of the most forward-looking WUI codes in the U.S.
Homeowner Brodey Simkins describes the tragedy of losing his home to wildfire and his commitment to rebuilding with wildfire in mind.
Illustration of how different land use planning tools can help reduce wildfire risk
Example land use planning tools for wildfire, including community plans, land development regulations, fire codes, and funding information.
Find tools, maps, charts, and information about wildfire risk for all U.S. communities, counties, tribal areas, and states.
Neighborhoods at Risk is an easy-to-use website with interactive maps, charts, and resources to help communities identify neighborhoods that may be more impacted by climate change.
A free, easy-to-use tool that provides socioeconomic data for all U.S. communities, counties, and states.
The Rural Capacity Map helps identify communities where investments in staffing and expertise are needed to support infrastructure and climate resilience projects.