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National Fireground Score · 2024

Pennsylvania

43rd of 51Rising+1 rankHigh data coverage
National rank
43rd
vs. national avg
-11
Region
Northeast
Data year
2024
Analyst summary · auto-generated

Pennsylvania ranks 43rd of 51 on the National Fireground Score, placing it in the lower tier nationally. Its composite of 44 sits 11 points below the national average of 54.6. The score is shaped most by above-median community vulnerability. Pennsylvania is outperforming expectations: actual fire burden runs roughly 7 points below what its risk profile would predict. Funding does not appear to match the fire risk this state carries. Pennsylvania ranks 39th in funding per capita and 8th in fire burden.

Generated from this state's sourced metrics. In production, the narrative is produced by the Fireground Analytics engine.

What drives the score

Score breakdown

Three sub-scores combine into the composite. Burden and Vulnerability are inverted so a higher composite always means a stronger position.

Fire Burden40% weight
58 · nat 43
How hard is fire hitting this state relative to its size? Lower is better.
Fire Vulnerability25% weight
67 · nat 54
How exposed is this community to fire loss? Lower is better.
Fire Readiness35% weight
53 · nat 58
How well-resourced is this state for its risk? Higher is better.
How it builds the composite
17
19
Burden+17 pts
Vulnerability+8 pts
Readiness+19 pts
National Fireground Score44

Composite = 0.40 × (100 − Burden) + 0.25 × (100 − Vulnerability) + 0.35 × Readiness. Burden and Vulnerability are inverted so that a higher composite always means a stronger position.

Signature analysis

Expected vs. actual performance

Is this state doing better or worse than its risk profile predicts?

Expected vs. actual fire burden
Outperforming expectations

Actual fire burden is materially lower than its risk profile predicts.

Residual
-7
actual − expected
Expected 65
Actual 58
Lower burden →← Higher burden

Expected burden is modeled from Pennsylvania's vulnerability and demographic profile. A marker left of the band means fewer fire losses than conditions predict; right of the band means more. This is a benchmark signal, not a finding of cause. In production this model is the Fireground Analytics risk-adjusted engine.

Accountability

Funding & the burden it has to match

Grants, per-capita funding, and tax revenue set against the fire burden this state actually carries.

Accountability classification
High burden / low funding

Funding does not appear to match the fire risk this state carries.

Fire grant funding
$136.1M
federal, total
Funding per capita
$67
39th nationally
Fire tax / district revenue
$45
per capita
Emergency services investment
$70
per capita
Fire burden rank
8th
1 = highest burden
Funding rank
39th
1 = most funded

Are we funding fire service at a level that matches our risk?

Burden vs. funding — all 51 jurisdictions
High burden · low fundingHigh burden · high fundingLow burden · low fundingLow burden · high fundingPA
← Less fundedMore funded →
Context

How it compares

Regional peers, similar-population states, and similar-vulnerability states — measured against the same benchmark.

Open full compare →
5-year fireground score+1 since 2020· improvingRank fell 1 · 4243

Risers & fallers reflect movement in Pennsylvania's national position over the trailing five reporting years.

What to investigate next

Key insights

Sharp, sourced takeaways a chief or council member could act on.

Biggest strength

Fire tax / special-district revenue per capita ranks 22nd nationally (45 USD) — a top differentiator for Pennsylvania.

Biggest weakness

Fire property loss per capita ranks 43rd of 51 (134 USD), the metric dragging hardest on the composite.

Funding mismatch

Pennsylvania carries a high fire burden (8th) but ranks only 39th in funding per capita — the central accountability question for its leaders.

Grant opportunity

Federal fire grant funding per capita sits in the 26th percentile — headroom to compete for AFG, SAFER, and mitigation dollars.

Risk factor to monitor

Housing built before 1970 (43 %, 41st) is a structural vulnerability worth watching as housing and demographics shift.

Full transparency

Every metric, every source

The complete sourced dataset behind this report card. Each figure links to its public origin.

Every figure is traceable to a public source
MetricValueState percentileNat. rankYearSourceQuality
Fire incidents per 1,000 residents
6.5 per 1k
80th
41st2024U.S. Fire AdministrationReported
Fire deaths per 100k
1.5 per 100k
76th
41st2024Centers for Disease Control and PreventionReported
Fire injuries per 100k
8.3 per 100k
64th
33rd2024U.S. Fire AdministrationModeled estimate
Fire property loss per capita
$134
82nd
43rd2024U.S. Fire AdministrationReported
Population in poverty
16.7%
68th
35th2024U.S. Census BureauReported
Population age 65+
18.4%
64th
34th2024U.S. Census BureauReported
Housing built before 1970
43%
80th
41st2024U.S. Census BureauReported
Rural population
44%
72nd
38th2024U.S. Census BureauModeled estimate
Social vulnerability index
0.65
72nd
37th2024Federal Emergency Management AgencyReported
Federal fire grant funding per capita
$11
26th
37th2024Federal Emergency Management AgencyModeled estimate
Fire protection expenditure per capita
$157
42nd
30th2024U.S. Census BureauReported
Fire tax / special-district revenue per capita
$45
58th
22nd2024U.S. Census BureauReported
Firefighters per 1,000 residents
2.7 per 1k
38th
31st2024U.S. Fire Administration; National Fire Protection AssociationReported
NFIRS / NERIS reporting completeness
95%
46th
27th2024U.S. Fire AdministrationReported
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Go deeper than the public scorecard

The National Fireground Scorecard shows where Pennsylvania stands. Fireground Analytics shows the counties, departments, and decisions behind it — and what to do next.

Advanced analytics by Fireground Analytics. Public scores remain free, neutral, and fully sourced.

Sample data for demonstration only — not real rankings. See the methodology and sources. An initiative of Fireground Analytics.