Wildfires and smoke: Are you ready?
Wildfires can occur in nearby natural areas, within city limits and in surrounding regions. Dry vegetation, wind, and structures close together can allow fire to spread quickly in urban environments. Even fires far away from Vancouver can affect the community through smoke that travels long distances.
Wildfire smoke can impact air quality, outdoor activities and everyday routines. Authorities may use evacuation levels to communicate when you should prepare or leave an area if conditions change.

What this could look like in Vancouver
- Hazy skies or the smell of smoke in the air.
- Reduced air quality that affects breathing and outdoor activity.
- Changes to outdoor events, recreation, or work schedules.
- Evacuation alerts asking community members to prepare or leave an area if conditions change.
What you can do now
- Stay informed about fire conditions and air quality updates.
- Keep your vehicle fueled and ready to travel during wildfire season.
- Clear dry vegetation near your home during hot and dry weather.
- Consider how you would limit outdoor activity for you and your pets if smoke levels rise.
- Identify spaces in your home where you can maintain cleaner indoor air, such as rooms with closed windows and doors.
- Keep N95 masks in your vehicle emergency kit and go-bag.
During wildfire smoke conditions
- Follow guidance from local officials and pay attention to evacuation alerts.
- Make sure your go bag is easy to access if you need to leave quickly.
- Limit time outdoors when air quality is poor.
- Keep windows and doors closed when possible to reduce smoke indoors.
One small step today
Consider adding a well-fitting N95 or P100 mask to your go bag. It can help reduce exposure to smoke if air quality is poor.