Welcome to the NSW Rural Fire Service

Map legend

Each incident is given a name to assist with managing multiple incidents. The name of an incident does not necessarily reflect the exact location of that incident.

Incident Type Incident Description
Bush Fire  Forest and/or Scrub Fire
Grass Fire Grass Fire
Hazard Reduction Planned controlled burns to reduce bush fire hazards
Structure Fire A fire involving a residential, commercial or industrial building
Haystack Fire Haystack fire
HAZMAT The NSW RFS provides operational support to the Fire & Rescue NSW for hazardous materials incidents
MVA/Transport Transport incidents including motor vehicle accident, aircraft incident and incidents involving a railway or railway rolling stock
Assist Other Agency Assist other agency such as Fire & Rescue NSW, NSW Police, NSW SES, NSW Ambulance, Defence Force, interstate deployments etc
Search/Rescue Search and Rescue, rescue animal
Flood/Storm/Tree Down Assisting with Flood or storm damage or tree down
Vehicle/Equipment Fire Vehicle or Equipment fire such as car fire, farm machinery fire, transformer fire etc
Burn off Burn off such as stubble fire, pile burn etc
Fire Alarm Automatic Fire Alarm or Domestic Smoke Alarm
Medical Medical incident such as medical evacuation
Other Other incidents such as smoke in vicinity, gas leak, building collapse etc
Status and alert levels
StatusDescription
RespondingAn incident has been reported in this location, firefighters are currently responding.

Not Yet Controlled

A fire which is spreading on one or more fronts. Effective containment strategies are not in place for the entire perimeter.

Being Controlled

Effective strategies are in operation or planned for the entire perimeter.

Under Control

The fire is at a stage where fire fighting resources are only required for patrol purposes and major re-ignition is unlikely.

Alert Level Description

Emergency Warning

An Emergency Warning is the highest level of Bush Fire Alert. You may be in danger and need to take action immediately. Any delay now puts your life at risk.

Watch and Act

There is a heightened level of threat. Conditions are changing and you need to start taking action now to protect you and your family.

Advice

A fire has started. There is no immediate danger. Stay up to date in case the situation changes.

Permits. Burn Notifications. Fire Trails.

Click here if you need to apply for a Fire Permit or Total Fire Ban exemption, notify us of a planned burn, or to submit Fire Trails enquiries.

Live bush fire ready

We live with bush fire. So we live bush fire ready. Make your plan now.

Bush Fire Risk Management Plans

Bush Fire Risk Management Plans set out the work we will do to deal with bush fire risk in your area.

Increased risk of grassfires

Know the risks and get ready for grass fires this season