Kansas Wildfire Risk Map

Kansas sees genuine wildfire seasons in the Flint Hills and western plains, where spring winds drive fast-moving grassland fires — the 2016 Anderson Creek and 2017 Starbuck fires each burned hundreds of thousands of acres of rangeland.

USFS · FEMA · NIFC · USGSFederal 0–100 risk modelKansas — every county & ZIPFree · no signup

Reviewed by Tom Hunt, Wildfire Risk Expert

Check any Kansas address — free

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Fire locations come from NIFC — they update about once a day and are not real-time. In an emergency, always follow the official orders from your local authorities.

Kansas live wildfire map

Active wildfires across Kansas — perimeters and incident flames straight from NIFC, updated automatically. Tap any city or county marker to open its detailed fire risk report, or enter your exact address for a free street-level risk score.

See the live Kansas active fire map →

How Kansas wildfire risk is rated: FEMA's National Risk Index

The federal benchmark for Kansas is FEMA's National Risk Index (NRI), which scores wildfire risk for every U.S. county and Census tract. Each place gets one of five relative ratings — Very Low, Relatively Low, Relatively Moderate, Relatively High, or Very High — describing its risk compared with all other places at the same level nationwide.

A community's wildfire rating combines three things: how much fire damage is expected each year (Expected Annual Loss), how vulnerable the population is (Social Vulnerability), and how well it can recover (Community Resilience). For wildfire specifically, FEMA weighs a community’s exposure, fire frequency, and historic loss ratio. Wildfire is one of 18 natural hazards the NRI tracks.

Source: FEMA National Risk Index — Wildfire ↗. A county or tract rating is a starting point — your individual home's score depends on its exact location, terrain, and construction.

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Kansas wildfire risk — frequently asked

How high is wildfire risk in Kansas?

Kansas sees genuine wildfire seasons in the Flint Hills and western plains, where spring winds drive fast-moving grassland fires — the 2016 Anderson Creek and 2017 Starbuck fires each burned hundreds of thousands of acres of rangeland. Check your exact KS address for a free 0–100 wildfire risk score.

How does FEMA rate wildfire risk in Kansas?

FEMA's National Risk Index scores wildfire risk for every U.S. county and Census tract and assigns one of five relative ratings — Very Low, Relatively Low, Relatively Moderate, Relatively High, or Very High. A Kansas community's wildfire rating reflects its expected annual loss, social vulnerability, and community resilience, weighing fire exposure, frequency, and historic loss ratio. Source: FEMA National Risk Index (hazards.fema.gov/nri/wildfire).

Is fire insurance hard to get in Kansas?

In high-risk Kansas areas, wildfire hazard drives higher premiums and non-renewals. See the Kansas fire insurance guide for premium impact and how to find coverage.

How do I check my address's wildfire risk in Kansas?

Enter your exact Kansas street address on FireRisk.ai for a free street-level wildfire risk score, the nearest recorded fires, defensible-space zones, and home-insurance impact.