Departments
766
HIFLD registered
State profile
675 departments in the HIFLD registry across 135 counties — staffing, stations, EMS coverage and state fire statistics.
Departments
766
HIFLD registered
Total personnel
25,415
career + volunteer
Counties covered
135
of 135 counties
67% of 675 departments rely primarily on volunteer crews — a strong indicator of rural geography and tax base.
How wildfire acreage concentrates by fire size class — national context for Virginia
465 departments (69%) provide EMS services.
| # | Department | Type | Personnel |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | HANOVER COUNTY FIRE AND EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES - HANOVER COURTHOUSE VOLUNTEER FIRE Hanover | volunteer | 631 |
| 2 | CHESTERFIELD FIRE AND EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Chester | career | 533 |
| 3 | VIRGINIA BEACH FIRE DEPARTMENT Virginia Beach | career | 503 |
| 4 | NORFOLK FIRE - RESCUE Norfolk | career | 498 |
| 5 | HENRICO COUNTY DIVISION OF FIRE Richmond | career | 440 |
| 6 | NAVY REGIONAL MIDATLANTIC FIRE AND EMERGENCY SERVICES Norfolk | career | 389 |
| 7 | CHESAPEAKE FIRE DEPARTMENT Chesapeake | career | 378 |
| 8 | CITY OF ALEXANDRIA FIRE DEPARTMENT Alexandria | combination | 312 |
| 9 | ROANOKE FIRE AND RESCUE DEPARTMENT Roanoke | career | 305 |
| 10 | LOUDOUN COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF FIRE RESCUE AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Ashburn | combination | 287 |
Virginia operates 766 fire departments with 25,415 reported personnel across 135 counties. The organizational mix is a strong signal of how the state funds and delivers fire protection: 42 career (paid) departments, 448 volunteer departments, and 61 combination departments appear in the HIFLD registry. Volunteer staffing sits at 67% of departments, a figure that typically correlates with population density, rural geography, and local tax capacity. EMS delivery is meaningful for residents: 465 of these departments (69%) also run Emergency Medical Services in-house, while the rest rely on separate EMS agencies or county-level providers.
Risk and outcome data from USFA adds the human side of these structural numbers. Virginia records approximately 43,900 fires per year, leading to 86 fire deaths and 440 injuries annually. Reported property loss averages about $466M per year, which insurers fold into ISO Public Protection Classification scores and homeowners premiums. Those statewide totals are absorbed unevenly: dense metros tend to drive call volume and career staffing, while rural counties lean on volunteer crews covering large response districts with longer arrival times. The ranking position of #20 among peers reflects the interaction of these factors rather than any single metric.
For homeowners, insurers, journalists, and policy staff, this page is a starting point rather than a verdict. Reading department-by-department profiles reveals which jurisdictions carry the heaviest load (see the largest-by-personnel list above) and which counties have thinner coverage (browse the counties panel). Cross-referencing fire cause data, state fire codes, and FEMA AFG/SAFER grant history paints a fuller picture of where federal and state investment has flowed and where staffing gaps remain. All figures come directly from the HIFLD Open Data program (FEMA/DHS) and USFA published fire statistics; counts can lag real-world changes by 6 to 18 months and small volunteer departments are sometimes underreported, so treat single-department anomalies as cues to verify with the local agency.
Data from HIFLD Open Data and USFA published statistics. Coverage may vary.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.