Texas Red Flag Warning
Whether Texas is under a Red Flag Warning right now — live from the National Weather Service — plus what it means, the restrictions it triggers, and how to stay safe.
Texas Red Flag Warning map
Live · NWSThe shaded zones are the exact areas under a warning, drawn live from National Weather Service alert polygons. Tap any zone for its details and a link to the official NWS alert.
Checking Texas fire-weather alerts…
What a Red Flag Warning means in Texas
A Red Flag Warning is issued by the National Weather Service when critical fire-weather conditions are happening or about to — usually a mix of low humidity, strong or gusty wind, and dry fuels. It doesn’t mean a fire has started; it means the atmosphere is primed so that any spark in Texas can ignite and spread dangerously fast. A Fire Weather Watch is the heads-up one level down — conditions could become critical in the next 12–72 hours.
What’s restricted during a Red Flag Warning
Exact rules vary by county and land agency, but a Red Flag Warning commonly means:
- No open burning — campfires, debris/yard burning, and burn barrels are typically banned.
- No fireworks of any kind.
- Don’t mow, weld, grind, or use equipment that throws sparks in or near dry vegetation.
- Never toss cigarettes; don’t park hot vehicles over dry grass.
- Secure trailer chains so they can’t drag and spark.
Always confirm the specific restrictions for your county, city, and any public land with the managing agency — penalties for violations rise sharply during a warning.
Get free wildfire alerts for your area
We’ll email you when a new wildfire is reported near you or the National Weather Service issues a Red Flag Warning for your area. Free, and you can unsubscribe anytime.
Everything for Texas wildfire safety
More Texas fire resources
Texas Red Flag Warning FAQ
Is Texas under a Red Flag Warning today?
The live banner at the top of this page pulls active Red Flag Warnings and Fire Weather Watches for Texas directly from the National Weather Service, updated each time you load the page. It shows which areas are affected and when each alert expires.
What does a Red Flag Warning mean in Texas?
A Red Flag Warning means the National Weather Service expects critical fire-weather conditions — typically some combination of low humidity, strong wind, and dry fuels — that let any new fire start easily and spread fast. It doesn’t mean there’s a fire; it means conditions are dangerous, so any spark is high-risk. A Fire Weather Watch is the step below it: conditions could become critical in the next 12–72 hours.
What is restricted during a Red Flag Warning in Texas?
Restrictions vary by county and land-management agency, but Red Flag Warnings commonly trigger bans on open burning, campfires, and fireworks, and warnings against any spark-producing activity (mowing dry grass, welding, grinding, dragging trailer chains). Check your county, city, and — on public land — the managing agency for the exact rules in effect.
How long does a Red Flag Warning last?
Most Red Flag Warnings run for a defined window — often an afternoon and evening when wind and low humidity peak — and expire automatically; the live status above shows the expiration time for each active alert in Texas. They can be reissued day after day during a prolonged dry, windy stretch.
How do I get notified of a Red Flag Warning near me?
Sign up for free fire alerts on this page and we’ll email you when a Red Flag Warning is issued for your area or a new wildfire ignites nearby. You can also enable alerts from the National Weather Service and your county’s emergency notification system.
Live alerts are pulled from the National Weather Service (weather.gov) and are for awareness. For official warnings, restrictions, and evacuation orders, follow the NWS, your county, and local fire authorities, and call 911 in an emergency.
Know your home’s wildfire risk — before the next fire
Get your free 0–100 wildfire risk score, every fire recorded nearby, what it means for your insurance, and the steps that lower it — built on official federal data.
Check my home’s wildfire risk score →