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Fire Incidents in South Carolina (SC)

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This section offers an overview of all fire incidents in South Carolina (SC). We analyzed the annual National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS) Public Data Release files provided by the U.S. Fire Administration's (USFA) National Fire Data Center (NFDC) to get this data. Please note, this isn't a fire census. The input from the fire departments may contain human error but the proportion of fire incidents reported to NFIRS is large enough to make reasonable interferences.

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Noncontained Fire Incidents in South Carolina (SC)

Noncontained fires demand detailed fire investigations so we've only accounted for those in this report. We haven't considered contained fires with no casualties or significant property loss for this section.

South Carolina (SC) Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of fire incidents. Columbia ranks first with 759 incidents, while Nesmith ranked last, with 10 incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Columbia759883992265
2Anderson557516318299
3Greenville463543476366
4Sumter378483480391
5Spartanburg343314302259
6Myrtle Beach325255298236
7Florence319329369204
8Lexington29129224479
9Summerville264197161189
10Orangeburg201179190150

South Carolina (SC) Wildland Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of wildland fires. Conway ranks first with 87 incidents, while Williston ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Conway8796827
2Walterboro44900
3Myrtle Beach3635354
4Loris30442615
5North Charleston271410
6Johns Island26141512
7Hartsville2322165
8Newberry2211137
9Bennettsville2139177
10McColl2027163

South Carolina (SC) Arson Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of intentional fires. Charleston ranks first with 3 incidents, while York ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Charleston3481
2Lake City3010
3Lexington3100
4Anderson2201
5Belton2010
6Summerville2012
7Beaufort County1101
8Boiling Springs1000
9Camden1000
10Cassatt1100

South Carolina (SC) Juvenile Arson Fire Incidents (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of juvenile intentional fires. Greenville ranks first with 2 incidents, while York ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Greenville2020
2Summerville2020
3Charleston1111
4Florence1010
5Greenville County1100
6Lake City1000
7Pickens1000
8Spartanburg1011
9Timmonsville1000
10Abbeville0000

South Carolina (SC) Fire Incidents with Civilian Casualties (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of fires with civilian casualties. Myrtle Beach ranks first with 14 incidents, while Williston ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Myrtle Beach1481418
2Conway11434
3Orangeburg10944
4Hilton Head Island8410
5Columbia7947
6Lexington6432
7Spartanburg5253
8Charleston4186
9Greenville4959
10Loris4356

South Carolina (SC) Fire Incidents with Fire Service Casualties (Top 10 Cities)

This table ranks South Carolina (SC) cities based on the number of fires with firefighter casualties. Lexington ranks first with 8 incidents, while York ranked last, with Loading incidents.

PositionCity4Y Trend2023202220212020
1Lexington8510
2Myrtle Beach6564
3Anderson5041
4Columbia4361
5Loris4000
6Conway3021
7Dillon3000
8Georgetown3000
9Beaufort County2011
10Charleston2024

Where is Fire Incident Data Coming From? NFIRS

The NFIRS is a reporting standard that fire departments use to uniformly report on the full range of their activities, from fire to emergency medical services (EMS) to equipment involved in the response.

Anyone analyzing the NFIRS data should note that NFIRS is neither a random sample nor a census of fire incidents or casualties in the United States. As such, the analyst may not accurately make estimates of total fires, fire losses, or fire casualties in the United States from NFIRS data alone. Similarly, statistical means (averages) or standard error measurements taken from NFIRS describe the population of fire incidents related to fire departments that participate in NFIRS but do not describe the population of fire incidents in the Nation as a whole. However, the proportion of fire incidents reported to NFIRS is large enough that reasonable inferences can be made that the proportions of fires in NFIRS are similar to the true national measurements.