Utah fire mitigation tax benefits

What Utah homeowners can recover at tax time for defensible space and home hardening — the state credit picture, federal disaster treatment, and the grants that offset the rest.

No dedicated state credit — see grants & federal options below

Utah state tax credit

As of 2026, Utah does not currently offer a dedicated statewide income-tax credit specifically for wildfire mitigation. That doesn’t mean there’s no help — federal disaster tax treatment, state and local grant / cost-share programs, free chipping and slash-removal days, and insurer mitigation discounts can all offset the cost of hardening your home.

Federal tax treatment

Casualty-loss deduction in a federal disaster area

If your home is damaged by a wildfire in a federally declared disaster area, you may be able to deduct unreimbursed casualty losses on your federal return. The rules are specific (and tie to your reimbursement and basis), so work with a tax professional and see IRS Pub. 547.

Qualified wildfire relief payments excluded from income

Under the federal Disaster Tax Relief Act, qualified wildfire-relief and settlement payments for losses from federally declared wildfire disasters have been excluded from taxable income for the covered years. Confirm whether your payment qualifies before reporting it.

Mitigation grants & rebates may be non-taxable

Some state and utility wildfire-mitigation grants and rebates are structured to be excluded from income. Treatment varies by program and year — get the specifics for any grant you receive.

Grants & discounts that offset the cost in Utah

State & local grant / cost-share programs. State forestry agencies, fire districts, and counties run defensible-space cost-share, home-hardening grant, and free chipping/slash-removal programs that directly reduce what you pay out of pocket.

Federal conservation programs (NRCS EQIP). The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service’s EQIP program can cost-share fuel-reduction and forest-health work on qualifying private land.

Insurance mitigation discounts. A Class-A roof, ember-resistant vents, and documented defensible space increasingly earn premium discounts — and in high-risk areas, keep a policy from being non-renewed. That’s real money back every year, not just at tax time.

Get a vetted Utah mitigation contractor and the documentation you’ll need for a credit, grant, or insurance discount — through the form below.

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More Utah resources

Utah fire mitigation tax FAQ

Does Utah have a wildfire mitigation tax credit?

As of 2026, Utah does not currently offer a dedicated statewide income-tax credit specifically for wildfire mitigation. That doesn’t mean there’s no help — federal disaster tax treatment, state and local grant / cost-share programs, free chipping and slash-removal days, and insurer mitigation discounts can all offset the cost of hardening your home.

Can I deduct fire mitigation costs in Utah?

Federally, routine mitigation isn’t a blanket deduction, but if your Utah home is damaged in a federally declared disaster you may be able to deduct unreimbursed casualty losses, and qualified wildfire-relief payments have been excluded from income under recent federal law. Confirm specifics with a tax professional.

How do I document mitigation work for taxes in Utah?

Keep itemized receipts, the contractor’s invoice and license details, and dated before/after photos. The same records support a tax credit, an insurance mitigation discount, and any future claim — keep them together.

General information only, reviewed June 2026 — not tax advice. FireRisk.ai is not a tax advisor. Credits, income limits, and caps change and depend on your specific return. Confirm with a licensed tax professional and the Utah department of revenue before claiming.