National statistics

Fire and rescue incident statistics: England, year ending June 2022

Published 10 November 2022

Applies to England

Frequency of release: Quarterly

Forthcoming releases: Home Office statistics release calendar

Home Office responsible statistician: Helene Clark

Press enquiries: pressoffice@homeoffice.gov.uk

Telephone: 0300 123 3535

Public enquiries: firestatistics@homeoffice.gov.uk

This release contains statistics about incidents attended by fire and rescue services (FRSs) in England for the year ending June 2022. The statistics are sourced from the Home Office’s online Incident Recording System (IRS) and include statistics on all incidents, fire-related fatalities, casualties from fires and response times to fires, with long term comparisons. In addition this release includes a section covering statistics for Great Britain for the year ending March 2022.

Key results

FRSs attended 584,881 incidents in the year ending June 2022, an 11 per cent increase compared with the previous year (529,167). Of these incidents, there were 154,772 fires which was a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (149,804).

There were 275 fire-related fatalities in the year ending June 2022 compared with 251 in the previous year. The 275 fire-related fatalities included 99 fire-related fatalities from the final three months of 2021, which was the highest quarterly figure recorded since April, May and June in 2017 (the quarter the Grenfell Tower fire occurred in) and prior to that the largest since October, November and December in 2008. The two quarterly figures since (for January to March 2022 and April to June 2022) are more in line with recent quarterly data, whereas at this stage the quarterly figure for October to December 2021 appears to be an exception to the more recent quarterly data and trends.

1. Incident summary

Incidents that FRSs attend are categorised into three main types - fires attended, non-fire incidents and fire false alarms.

Key results

In the year ending June 2022:

  • 584,881 incidents were attended by FRSs, this was an 11 per cent increase compared with the previous year (529,167), a one per cent increase compared with five years ago (576,800) and a two per cent increase compared with ten years ago (572,026) Source: FIRE0102

  • of all incidents attended by FRSs, fires accounted for 26 per cent, fire false alarms 40 per cent and non-fire incidents 34 per cent, compared with fires accounting for 34 per cent, fire false alarms 43 per cent and non-fire incidents 23 per cent ten years ago Source: FIRE0102

Total incidents

The total number of incidents attended by FRSs in England peaked in the year to March 2004, at over one million incidents. For around a decade, there was a general decline in all three categories of incidents attended and by the year ending March 2015 there were fewer than half a million incidents. The number of incidents then rose to around 577,000 in the year to March 2019 (the largest total since the year to March 2012) but has fluctuated since. It was around 585,000 in the year ending June 2022.

In contrast to the earlier decreases (caused by a reduction in fire and fire false alarm incidents), the increase in total incidents over the four years to March 2019 was driven by increases in fire and non-fire incidents. Furthermore, the increase in non-fire incidents over this time was mainly due to changes in the number of flooding incidents and collaboration incidents attended, which are discussed in Section 4.

Figure 1.1: Total incidents attended by incident type, England; comparing year ending June 2012 and year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0102

Notes:

  1. Non-fire incidents include non-fire false alarms

For the year ending June 2022, there was an 11 per cent increase in all incidents compared to the previous year. The increase in incidents attended this year compared with the previous year was driven by increases in all three main incident types (fires, non-fire incidents and fire false alarms), as restrictions to life due to the coronovirus (COVID-19) pandemic in the previous year may have reduced the number of certain incident types and this should be borne in mind when considering year on year comparisons.

Figure 1.1 shows that of the 584,881 total incidents, fire false alarms made up the majority of incidents with 40 per cent, with non-fire incidents (34 per cent) and fires (26 per cent) making up the remainder of incidents. The percentage of incidents that were non-fire incidents is higher than in recent years, and in contrast the percentage that were fires was lower than in recent years.

2. Fires attended

Fire incidents are broadly categorised as primary, secondary or chimney fires depending on the location, severity and risk levels of the fire, and on the scale of response needed from FRSs to contain them.

Primary fires are those that meet at least one of the following criteria - occurred in a (non-derelict) building, vehicle or outdoor structure or involved a fatality, casualty or rescue or were attended by five or more pumping appliances.

Secondary fires are generally small outdoor fires, not involving people or property.

Chimney fires are in (non-industrial) buildings where the flame was contained within the chimney structure.

Key results

In the year ending June 2022:

  • FRSs attended 154,772 fires, a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (149,804) and a 20 per cent decrease compared with ten years ago (194,245 in the year ending June 2012) Source: FIRE0102

  • there were 63,751 primary fires, a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (61,934) and a 22 per cent decrease compared with ten years ago (81,844 in the year ending June 2012) Source: FIRE0102

  • FRSs attended 751 fires in purpose-built high-rise (10+ storeys) flats or maisonettes, a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (729) and accounted for three per cent of the 26,959 primary dwelling fires attended Source: FIRE0205

Total fires

The long-term picture shows that the total number of fires attended by FRSs decreased for around a decade - falling by around two-thirds from a peak of around 474,000 in the financial year to March 2004 to around 154,000 in the year ending March 2013. The total has subsequently varied between around 150,000 and 185,000 - with the highest annual figure in the year to March 2019, caused by the hot, dry summer of 2018.

More recently the number of fires in the year ending June 2022 decreased by 12 per cent compared with five years ago (176,107) and decreased by 20 per cent compared with ten years ago (194,245). The total number of fires increased by three per cent from 149,804 in the year ending June 2021 to 154,772 in the year ending June 2022 (Figure 2.1).

Figure 2.1: Total fires attended by type of fire, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0102

Primary fires

In the year ending June 2022 there were 63,751 primary fires (41% of the 154,772 fires attended). This was a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (61,934), an 18 per cent decrease compared with five years ago (77,401) and a 22 per cent decrease compared with ten years ago (81,844).

There are four types of primary fires - dwelling fires, other building fires, road vehicle fires and other outdoor fires. In the year ending June 2022 there were:

  • 26,959 dwelling fires, this has virtually unchanged compared with the previous year (27,030), it decreased by 12 per cent compared with five years ago (30,743) and it decreased by 22 per cent compared with ten years ago (34,547). Dwelling fires made up 42 per cent of primary fires in the year ending June 2022.

  • 13,205 other building fires, this has increased by ten per cent compared with the previous year (11,964), it decreased by 20 per cent compared with five years ago (16,589) and it decreased by 30 per cent compared with ten years ago (18,877). Other buildings fires made up 21 per cent of primary fires in the year ending June 2022.

  • 18,545 road vehicle fires, this has increased by three per cent compared with the previous year (17,976), it decreased by 23 per cent compared with five years ago (24,191) and it decreased by 17 per cent compared with ten years ago (22,448). Road vehicle fires made up 29 per cent of primary fires in the year ending June 2022.

  • 5,042 other outdoor fires, this has increased by two per cent compared with the previous year (4,964), it decreased by 14 per cent compared with five years ago (5,878) and it decreased by 16 per cent compared with ten years ago (5,972). Other outdoor fires made up eight per cent of primary fires in the year ending June 2022.

Of the 26,959 primary dwelling fires attended by FRSs, 73 per cent were in houses, bungalows, converted flats and other properties, whilst 27 per cent were in purpose-built flats or maisonettes.

FRSs attended 751 fires in purpose-built high-rise (10+ storeys) flats or maisonettes, a three per cent increase compared with the previous year (729), a three per cent increase compared with five years ago (727) and a 25 per cent decrease compared with ten years ago (999). The number of fires in purpose-built high-rise (10+ storeys) flats or maisonettes accounted for three per cent of the 26,959 primary dwelling fires attended in the year ending June 2022, a similar proportion to last year.

When looking at fires in purpose-built flats or maisonettes in more detail, 17 per cent of primary dwelling fires were in purpose-built low-rise (1-3 storeys) flats or maisonettes; seven per cent were in purpose-built medium-rise (4-9 storeys) flats or maisonettes and three per cent were in purpose-built high-rise (10+ storeys) flats or maisonettes.These figures are similar to previous years.

3. Fire false alarms

Fire false alarms are where an FRS attends a location believing there to be a fire incident but, on arrival, discovers that no such incident exists or existed. These are broadly categorised by motive into ‘due to apparatus’, ‘good intent’ and ‘malicious’.

Due to apparatus calls are where a fire alarm or fire-fighting equipment operate (including accidental initiation by persons) in error.

Good intent calls are made in good faith in the belief that the FRS really would be attending a fire.

Malicious false alarms are made with the intention of getting the FRS to attend a non-existent incident.

Key result

In the year ending June 2022:

  • FRSs attended 233,471 fire false alarms, an increase of nine per cent compared with the previous year (213,980), an increase of three per cent compared with five years ago (225,962) and a decrease of four per cent compared with ten years ago (243,627) Source: FIRE0102

Fire false alarms by type

The number of fire false alarms attended by FRSs in England was on a general downward trajectory, from a peak of around 393,900 early in the 2000s to a low of around 211,000 in the year ending September 2015. Since then there has been a gradual increase (see Figure 3.1) to around 233,000 fire false alarms in the year ending June 2022.

The proportion of total incidents that were fire false alarms in the year ending June 2022 was 40 per cent. This proportion has been relatively stable over the past decade, varying between 39 and 44 per cent.

Figure 3.1: Total fire false alarms by type of false alarm, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0102

In the year ending June 2022 there were:

  • 163,936 fire false alarms due to apparatus: a 14 per cent increase from the previous year (143,345), an eight per cent increase from five years previously (151,571) and a one per cent decrease from ten years previously (165,523)

  • 63,095 fire false alarms due to good intent: a four per cent decrease from the previous year (65,429), a six per cent decrease from five years previously (67,277) and an eight per cent decrease from ten years previously (68,887)

  • 6,440 malicious fire false alarms: a 24 per cent increase from the previous year (5,206), a nine per cent decrease from five years previously (7,114) and a 30 per cent decrease from ten years previously (9,217) Source: FIRE0104

The differing directions of change in false alarm incident types have, in part, appeared to be the result of the three national lockdowns, various local lockdowns and restrictions on life throughout the year ending March 2021 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. These are discussed further in Fire and rescue incident statistics: England, year ending March 2021

4. Non-fire incidents attended

FRSs attend many types of incident that are not fires or fire false alarms. These are known as non-fire incidents or special service incidents. Examples include flooding incidents, responding to road traffic collisions, animal assistance and collaboration incidents such as effecting entry or exit and assisting other agencies (a complete list can be found in fire data table FIRE0902).

Key results

In the year ending June 2022:

  • FRSs attended 196,638 non-fire incidents, the largest figure for four quarters since comparable data became available, a 19 per cent increase compared with the previous year (165,383) and a 13 per cent increase compared with five years ago (174,731) Source: FIRE0901

Of these non-fire incidents:

  • FRSs attended 61,300 collaborating incidents[footnote 1], a 22 per cent increase compared with the previous year (50,274) and a 79 per cent increase compared with five years ago (34,204) Source: FIRE0901
  • FRSs attended 31,138 road traffic collisions, a 22 per cent increase compared with the previous year (25,441) and a four per cent increase compared with five years ago (29,830) Source: FIRE0901

  • FRSs attended 18,118 medical incidents[footnote 2], a 16 per cent increase compared with the previous year (15,669) and a 60 per cent decrease compared with five years ago (44,846) Source: FIRE0901

  • FRSs attended 15,533 flooding incidents, a one per cent decrease compared with the previous year (15,649) and a 26 per cent increase compared with five years ago (12,323) Source: FIRE0901

All non-fire incidents attended

There was a general decline in the number of non-fire incidents attended between the year to March 2008 and the year to September 2015 (Figure 4.1). This was followed by a large increase of almost two-fifths to the year to March 2017, coinciding with the introduction of Emergency Medical Responding (EMR) and the duty to collaborate legislation. When the EMR trial stopped in 2017 the total number of non-fire incidents slowly decreased to around 160,000 in the year ending September 2020.

In the year ending June 2022 this slow decrease was reversed with a 19 per cent increase in non-fire incidents compared to the previous year, and the largest four incident categories all showed increases.

Figure 4.1: Total non-fire incidents attended by FRSs, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0901

In the year ending June 2022 FRSs attended 196,638 non-fire incidents, the largest figure for four quarters since comparable data became available. This was a 19 per cent increase compared with the previous year (165,383), a 13 per cent increase compared with five years ago (174,731) and a 47 per cent increase compared with ten years ago (134,154). The large change between the previous and latest year partly reflects the impact of national lockdowns and restrictions in 2020 and early 2021.

Types of non-fire incidents

Overall the number of non-fire incidents increased by 19 per cent, compared to the previous year as shown in Table 4.1. The table shows that while the three largest incident types increased over this time the number of flooding incidents decreased. Again, the comparator year was affected by the national lockdowns and restrictions that were particularly strong in the year to June 2021.

Table 4.1: The largest categories of non-fire incidents attended by FRSs in England; year ending June 2021 to year ending June 2022

Non-fire incident type Year ending Jun 2021 Year ending Jun 2022 % change
Total non-fire incidents 165,383 196,638 +19%
Collaborating incidents 50,274 61,300 +22%
Road traffic collisions 25,441 31,138 +22%
Medical incidents 15,669 18,118 +16%
Flooding incidents 15,649 15,533 -1%

Source: FIRE0901, FIRE0902

The 22 per cent increase in collaborating incidents, compared to the previous year, continues a recent trend of increases. In the year to March 2015, there were 21,146 collaborating incidents, this had virtually doubled by the end of the year to March 2019 (41,635) and nearly trebled by the year to March 2022 (59,636). In the year to March 2015, there were 21,146 collaborating incidents, this total had virtually doubled by the end of the year to March 2019 (41,635) and nearly trebled by the year ending June 2022 (61,300). For the year ending June 2022, the three sub-categories of collaborating incidents each increased on the previous year, with assisting other agencies increasing by 23 per cent, effecting entry or exit increasing by 21 per cent and assisting at suicide attempts increasing by 18 per cent.

The start of the increase coincided with the duty to collaborate legislation, whereby each emergency service “must keep under consideration whether entering into a collaboration agreement with one or more other relevant emergency services in England could be in the interests of the efficiency or effectiveness of that service and those other services.”

The 16 per cent increase in medical incidents compared to the previous year counters a recent trend of decreases. The recent downward trend follows the removal of FBU support for EMR trials. These trials began in 2015 when the National Joint Council (NJC) supported trials where FRSs formed agreements with ambulance trusts to undertake health and care related work, in particular, co-responding. There was a large increase of almost two-fifths to the year to March 2017, coinciding with the introduction. Following the withdrawal of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) support in September 2017, the number of these incidents decreased to a level slightly higher than before the trials.

The 22 per cent increase in road traffic collisions, compared to June 2021, probably reflects increases in road traffic, particularly in 2021 compared to 2020 where the number of journeys were affected by national lockdowns and restrictions. Prior to the number of journeys being affected by lockdown the series was relatively stable (between 27,000 and 34,000 in each year since data became available in the year to March 2010) and has now returned to broadly that level (31,138 in June 2022).

The one per cent decrease in flooding incidents, compared to the previous year, could be due to the dry spring in April to June 2022, which is part of the most recent year’s figure.

Fire-related fatalities are those that would not have otherwise occurred had there not been a fire. For the purpose of publications, a fire-related fatality includes those that were recorded as ‘don’t know’.

Non-fatal casualties are those resulting from a fire, whether the injury was caused by the fire or not.

As the Incident Recording System (IRS) is a continually updated database, the statistics published in this release may not match those held locally by FRSs, and revisions may occur in the future (see the revisions section for further detail). This may be particularly relevant for fire-related fatalities, where a coroner’s report could lead to revisions in the data some time after the incident. It should also be noted that the numbers of fire-related fatalities are prone to year-on-year fluctuations due to relatively low numbers.

Key results

In the year ending June 2022:

  • there were 275 fire-related fatalities (see Figure 5.1) compared with 251 in the previous year (an increase of ten per cent) Source: FIRE0502)

  • there were 208 fire-related fatalities in dwelling fires, compared with 193 in the previous year (an increase of eight per cent)

  • there were 6,192 non-fatal casualties[footnote 3], a four per cent decrease compared with 6,425 in the previous year - this includes 2,526 casualties requiring hospital treatment, a five per cent decrease compared with the 2,667 in the previous year Source: FIRE0502)

The number of fire-related fatalities in England has been on a general downward trend from the early 1980s when comparable figures first became available. There was an exceptionally high figure in the year ending June 2017 (Figure 5.1) due to the Grenfell Tower fire[footnote 4].

The number of fire-related fatalities in year ending June 2022 included 99 fire-related fatalities from the final three months of 2021, the highest quarterly figure since April to June 2017 (the quarter the Grenfell Tower fire occurred in) and prior to that the highest since October, November and December in 2008. Fire-related fatalities in dwelling fires are the largest category and have also shown the largest figure since April, May and June in 2017. In the year ending June 2022, there was also a relatively large number of road vehicle fire-related fatalities (43) compared to June 2021 that contributed to the overall increase. It should also be noted that the numbers of fire-related fatalities, whether annual or quarterly, are prone to fluctuations due to relatively low numbers.

Figure 5.1: Total fire-related fatalities, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0502

Notes:

  1. Fire-related fatalities are those that would not have otherwise occurred had there not been a fire. Those where the role of fire was “not known” are included in “fire-related”.

There was one fire-related fatality in purpose-built high-rise (10+ storeys) flats or maisonettes in the year ending June 2022. FRSs attended 751 fires in these flats or maisonettes. This compares to six fire-related fatalities in the previous year in four fatal fires.

There were 119 fire-related fatalities in single occupancy houses in the year ending June 2022, compared to 89 in the previous year.

Non-fatal casualties

The number of non-fatal casualties in fires in England has been on a downward trend since the mid-1990s. More detailed data became available due to the introduction of the online IRS in 2009, and since then the “hospital slight” and “first aid” categories have shown the biggest decline. Compared with the year ending June 2021 the number of hospital severe casualties increased by one per cent, the number of hospital slight casualties decreased by seven per cent, the number of first aid given decreased by five per cent and the number of recommended precautionary checks was virtually unchanged.

Figure 5.2: Total non-fatal casualties in fires by injury severity, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE0502

Notes:

  1. These figures are for all casualties in fires, whether the fire caused the casualty or not.

6. Response times to fire incidents

Headline findings on response times have been included in Fire and Rescue Incident Statistics since the year ending March 2021 edition. Table FIRE1001 is published alongside this release and shows greater detail than this commentary, for example, breakdowns by time components. Full commentary and further tables for the financial year 2020 to 2021 can be found in Detailed Analysis of Fire Response Times

Key results

In the year ending June 2022:

  • the average total response time to primary fires[footnote 5] in England was 8 minutes and 52 seconds, the longest average response time seen since comparable statistics became available: an increase of 13 seconds since the previous year Source: FIRE1001)
  • all types of primary fires showed an increase in average response times (dwelling fires by ten seconds, other building fires by ten seconds, road vehicle fires by 20 seconds and other outdoor fires by ten seconds)

  • the average total response time to secondary fires[footnote 6] (which can broadly be thought of as smaller outdoor fires, not involving people or property) in England decreased by ten seconds, compared with the previous year, to 9 minutes and 10 seconds

Response times to fire incidents

Total response time is the minutes and seconds elapsed from the time of call to the arrival of the first vehicle at the incident.

The following incidents are not included in response time totals:

a. Road vehicle fires, where the road vehicle was abandoned.

b. Where the location of the fire was a derelict property.

c. Where an FRS learned of the fire when it was known to have already been extinguished (known as “late calls”).

d. Where the total response time for an incident was over an hour or less than one minute (to avoid erroneous data or exceptional incidents from skewing the averages).

e. Where the sequence of events (time of call - mobilisation - vehicle mobile - arrival at scene) in an incident is not recorded in a logical sequence, either through recording error (e.g. a vehicle appears to have arrived before it left) or absence of data (null values).

Looking at the long-term trend, response times to fires increased gradually between the year ending March 1995 (when these data were first collected) and the year ending March 2015. Since then, they have generally levelled off. The average total response time to primary fires in the year ending June 2022 was 8 minutes and 52 seconds, the longest average response time seen since comparable statistics became available, an increase of 52 seconds over the past decade, 13 seconds in the past five years and 13 seconds over the last year - the pattern varied across different types of fire (see Figure 6.1). Response times in general decreased in the year to June 2021 due to lockdowns causing fewer road journeys.

The average response time to dwelling fires increased by ten seconds in the year ending June 2022 compared with the previous year (from 7 minutes and 43 seconds to 7 minutes and 53 seconds). Within the dwelling fire category, the average response time to fires in purpose-built flats/maisonettes was 7 minutes and 8 seconds; to houses and bungalows it was 8 minutes and 22 seconds and 7 minutes and 46 seconds for other dwellings. This may reflect the fact that flats are generally in urban locations which tend to be in closer proximity to a fire station than rural areas.

The average response time to other building fires in the year ending June 2022 was 8 minutes and 50 seconds, an increase of ten seconds compared with the previous year. Of these, the average response time to fires in other residential buildings (such as student halls of residence, nursing or care homes and hotels) was 8 minutes and 24 seconds, compared with 8 minutes and 53 seconds for non-residential buildings. This was likely due to FRSs prioritising fires with the greatest risk to life.

Response times for road vehicle fires increased. The average response time in the year ending June 2022 was 9 minutes and 52 seconds, an increase of 20 seconds compared with the previous year.

The average response time to other outdoor fires increased by ten seconds to 11 minutes and 16 seconds. It should be noted that other outdoor fires are numerically the smallest of the main primary fire types and so are prone to fluctuation as illustrated in Figure 6.1.

In the year ending June 2022 the average response time to secondary fires was 9 minutes and 10 seconds, a decrease of ten seconds from last year. This was the only incident type to show a decrease in average response time between June 2021 and June 2022.

Figure 6.1: Average total response times (minutes) by type of fire, England; year ending June 2012 to year ending June 2022

Source: FIRE1001

7. Summary of changes over time

Table 7.1: Number of incidents, comparing the year ending June 2022 with one, five and ten years previously

Incident type Year ending Jun 2022 Year ending Jun 2021 1 year change Year ending Jun 2017 5 year change Year ending Jun 2012 10 year change
All incidents 584,881 529,167 +11% 576,800 +1% 572,026 +2%
Fires 154,772 149,804 +3% 176,107 -12% 194,245 -20%
Primary fires 63,751 61,934 +3% 77,401 -18% 81,844 -22%
Dwelling fires 26,959 27,030 +0% 30,743 -12% 34,547 -22%
Accidental dwelling fires 24,218 24,342 -1% 27,566 -12% 30,193 -20%
Secondary fires 88,692 84,555 +5% 94,615 -6% 106,141 -16%
Fire false alarms 233,471 213,980 +9% 225,962 +3% 243,627 -4%
Non-fire incidents 196,638 165,383 +19% 174,731 +13% 134,154 +47%
Fatalities and non-fatal casualties Year ending Jun 2022 Year ending Jun 2021 1 year change Year ending Jun 2017 5 year change Year ending Jun 2012 10 year change
Fire-related fatalities 275 251 +10% 343 -20% 317 -13%
Fire-related fatalities in dwellings 208 193 +8% 291 -29% 224 -7%
Non-fatal casualties 6,192 6,425 -4% 7,437 -17% 9,005 -31%
Non-fatal casualties requiring hospital treatment 2,526 2,667 -5% 3,350 -25% 4,134 -39%
Non-fatal casualties in dwellings 4,641 4,962 -6% 5,573 -17% 7,114 -35%

Table 7.3: Average response times, comparing the year ending June 2022 with one, five and ten years previously

Fire type Year ending Jun 2022 Year ending Jun 2021 1 year change Year ending Jun 2017 5 year change Year ending Jun 2012 10 year change
Primary fires 8m 52s 8m 39s +13s 8m 39s +13s 8m 0s +52s
Dwellings 7m 53s 7m 43s +10s 7m 47s +6s 7m 17s +36s
Other buildings 8m 50s 8m 40s +10s 8m 26s +24s 7m 46s +1m 4s
Road vehicles 9m 52s 9m 32s +20s 9m 35s +17s 8m 58s +54s
Other outdoors 11m 16s 11m 6s +10s 10m 47s +29s 9m 45s +1m 31s
Secondary fires 9m 10s 9m 20s -10s 9m 14s -4s 8m 30s +40s

Source: Fire statistics data tables

8. National comparisons

England, Scotland and Wales all use the Home Office’s Incident Recording System and therefore, data are comparable. National comparisons are included in this publication once all three nations have reported financial year statistics. All three nations publish more detailed information on fire and rescue incidents, focusing on the particular user needs in their nation (see Other related publications section for more details).

Key results

In the year ending March 2022:

  • there were around 708,000 incidents attended by FRSs in Great Britain, approximately 577,000 of these were in England, 96,000 in Scotland and 35,000 in Wales and these figures correspond to rates per million people of 10,216 in England, 17,465 in Scotland and 11,178 in Wales Source: FIRE0101

  • there were approximately 77,000 primary fires attended by FRSs in Great Britain, approximately 63,000 of these were in England, 10,000 in Scotland and 4,000 in Wales and these figures correspond to rates per million people of 1,124 in England, 1,786 in Scotland and 1,269 in Wales Source: FIRE0103

  • there were about 30,100 accidental dwelling fires attended by FRSs in Great Britain, approximately 24,500 of these were in England, 4,200 in Scotland and 1,500 in Wales and these figures correspond to rates per million people of 433 in England, 765 in Scotland and 472 in Wales Source: FIRE0201

  • there were 334 fire-related fatalities in Great Britain, 273 of these were in England, 40 in Scotland and 21 in Wales and these figures correspond to rates per million people of 5 in England, 7 in Scotland and 7 in Wales Source: FIRE0501

  • there were 7,592 non-fatal casualties in Great Britain, 6,309 of these were in England, 804 in Scotland and 479 in Wales and these figures correspond to rates per million people of 112 in England, 147 in Scotland and 154 in Wales Source: FIRE0501

9. Further information

This release contains statistics about incidents attended by fire and rescue services (FRSs) in England. The statistics are sourced from the Home Office’s online Incident Recording System (IRS). This system allows FRSs to complete an incident form for every incident attended, be it a fire, a false alarm or a non-fire incident (also known as a Special Service incident).

Fire and Rescue Incident Statistics and other Home Office statistical releases are available via the Statistics at Home Office pages on the GOV.UK website.

Data tables linked to this release and all other fire statistics releases can be found on the Home Office’s Fire statistics data tables page.

Guidance for using these statistics and other fire statistics outputs, including a Quality Report, is available on the fire statistics guidance page.

The information published in this release is kept under review, taking into account the needs of users and burdens on suppliers and producers, in line with the Code of Practice for Statistics. The Office for Statistics Regulation recently carried out a compliance check of the Home Office’s fire and rescue incident statistics against the Code of Practice and the results can be found in a letter to the Home Office’s Head of Profession published on the OSR website.

If you have any comments, suggestions or enquiries, please contact the team via email using firestatistics@homeoffice.gov.uk.

Revisions

The IRS is a continually updated database, with FRSs adding incidents daily. The figures in this release refer to records of incidents that occurred up to and including the end of June 2022. This includes incident records that were submitted to the IRS by 3 October 2022, when a snapshot of the database was taken for the purpose of analysis. As a snapshot of the dataset was taken on 3 October 2022, the statistics published may not match those held locally by FRSs and revisions may occur in the future. This is particularly the case for statistics with relatively small numbers, such as fire-related fatalities. For instance, this can occur because coroner’s reports may mean the initial view taken by the FRS will need to be revised; this can take many months, even years, to do so.

COVID-19 and the impact on the IRS

The figures presented in this release relate to incidents attended by FRSs during year ending June 2022.

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, restrictions in England, Scotland and Wales started from 12 March 2020. In England three lockdowns which applied strict limits on daily life were imposed. A first lockdown was applied on 23 March 2020 and was eased from 15 June 2020, a second lockdown began on 5 November 2020 and ended on 2 December 2020 and the third began on 4 January 2021 and ended on 12 April 2021. The restrictions and lockdowns are therefore captured in IRS data for this year and the comparator year.

Extra analyses on fire and rescue incidents during this period can be found in the year to March 2021 edition of this release, detailed analysis of fires attended by fire and rescue services, England, April 2020 to March 2021 and detailed analysis of non-fire incidents: England, April 2020 to March 2021.

Home Office publish five other statistical releases covering fire and rescue services.

These include:

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities also publish statistical releases on fire and rescue services

These include:

Fire statistics are published by the other UK nations:

Scottish fire statistics and Welsh fire statistics are published based on the IRS. Fire statistics for Northern Ireland are published by the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service using data from a system similar to the Incident Recording System, which means that they are not directly comparable to English, Welsh and Scottish data.

National Statistics

These statistics have been assessed by the UK Statistics Authority to ensure that they continue to meet the standards required to be designated as National Statistics. This statistical bulletin is produced to the highest professional standards and is free from political interference. It has been produced by statisticians working in accordance with the Home Office’s Statement of compliance with the Code of Practice for Official Statistics, which covers Home Office policy on revisions and other matters. The Chief Statistician, as Head of Profession, reports to the National Statistician with respect to all professional statistical matters and oversees all Home Office National Statistics products with respect to the Code, being responsible for their timing, content and methodology. This means that these statistics meet the highest standards of trustworthiness, impartiality, quality and public value, and are fully compliant with the Code of Practice for Statistics.

  1. Collaborating incidents include “Assisting other agencies”, “Effecting entry or exit” and “Suicide or suicide attempts”. 

  2. Medical incidents include “First responder” and “Co-responder” incidents. 

  3. For more detailed technical definitions of fire-related and non-fatal casualties, see the Fire Statistics Definitions document. A further breakdown of the different types of non-fatal casualties is available in the published fire data tables. 

  4. For more information on the Grenfell Tower fire and how the associated fire-related fatalities figures are recorded, see the Fire Statistics Definitions document

  5. Primary fires are those that meet at least one of the following criteria - occurred in a (non-derelict) building, vehicle or outdoor structure or involved a fatality, casualty or rescue or were attended by five or more pumping appliances. 

  6. Secondary fires are generally small outdoor fires, not involving people or property.