2018 Incident Archive

  • 483,016
    Total Emergency Responses
  • 7,948
    Wildfires
  • 1,975,086
    Acres Burned
  • 100
    Confirmed Loss of Life
  • 24,226
    Structures Destroyed

Layers

2018 Incidents
Incident Counties Started Acres Containment
Energy Fire San Luis Obispo 5/12/2025 15
0%
Sapphire Fire San Bernardino 5/12/2025 10
75%
3D Map
The information presented here reflects what is known to CAL FIRE and is updated frequently. Learn more about data processing

2018 Fire Season

The 2018 wildfire season was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire season on record in California, with a total of over 7,500 fires burning an area of over 1,670,000 acres, the largest area of burned acreage recorded in a fire season. In mid-July to August 2018, a series of large wildfires erupted across California, mostly in the northern part of the state, including the destructive Carr Fire and the Mendocino Complex Fire. On August 4, 2018, a national disaster was declared in Northern California, due to the extensive wildfires burning there. In November 2018, strong winds aggravated conditions in another round of large, destructive fires that occurred across the state. This new batch of wildfires included the Woolsey Fire and the Camp Fire, which killed at least 85 people. It destroyed more than 18,000 structures, becoming both California's deadliest and most destructive wildfire on record. The Mendocino Complex Fire burned more than 459,000 acres, becoming the largest complex fire in the state's history, with the complex's Ranch Fire surpassing the Thomas Fire and the Santiago Canyon Fire of 1889 to become California's single-largest recorded wildfire.

Pictured: The Flat Fire, which started in June of 2018 near Weaverville.

incidents by year