Missouri Wildfire Map & Tracker
2 active fires · Updated 1d ago2 active fires
161 acres burned
Largest: Weldon Springs Rx Fire
Active Wildfires in Missouri
About Missouri Wildfire Season
Missouri's primary fire window runs from mid February to mid April, with a shorter secondary season from October to early December. The Ozark landscape mixes cured dormant grass, which dries and catches quickly in short windows of low humidity and wind, with woodland fuel that needs a longer dry stretch to become dangerous. Fire here is overwhelmingly a human story. Less than one percent of Missouri's wildfires start naturally, despite the state seeing fifty to seventy days of thunderstorms most years, and power lines alone were responsible for over a hundred fifty fires in a single recent year. Historical research on fire scars suggests the Ozarks once burned across a far larger area than they do today, a scale researchers believe current conditions could still support under the right circumstances.Missouri Fire Map Today
- Wildfire incident markers. Every active fire in Missouri is shown with a colored marker. Red means active, yellow means mostly contained, and gray means fully contained or no longer being tracked.
- Incident details and updates. Tap any fire below to see its size, containment percentage, recent updates, and nearby air quality on its own page.
- Automatic updates. This page pulls directly from official incident data and refreshes automatically as conditions change. It is not a live, real time map, and fast moving fires can outpace how often this page updates.
- Full app map. Open the full interactive map to search, explore fires nationwide, and save locations to track over time.