1. Montana's wildfire risk, by the numbers
Montana combines large forest and rangeland fire with unusually long summer fire seasons — and rising WUI non-renewals.
Montana has among the highest per-state shares of fire-prone properties in the country. Fire fuels range across dense forest, foothills, and vast rangelands.
Fire seasons run long — often May through October — with the peak in July, August, and early September. Rising WUI non-renewals are pushing more Montana homeowners into the surplus-lines market.
2. Defensible space & home hardening
- Zone 0 (0–5 ft) — non-combustible buffer. Gravel, hardscape, or bare mineral soil against the foundation. No bark mulch or wood chips, no combustible plants, no wood fencing attached to the house. Clear leaves and needles from roof and gutters.
- Zone 1 (5–30 ft) — lean, clean, green. Irrigated, well-spaced, low-growing plants. Keep grass mowed short. Remove dead vegetation. Trim tree limbs at least 10 ft from the house and 10 ft from the chimney. Move firewood piles out to Zone 2.
- Zone 2 (30–100 ft) — reduced fuel. Mow annual grasses. Space trees so canopies don't touch — 10 ft apart on flat ground, more on slopes. Remove ladder fuels.
- Home hardening. Class-A rated roof, ember-resistant (⅛-inch mesh) vents, enclosed eaves and soffits, dual-pane or tempered windows, non-combustible siding where possible.
3. Build your home inventory long before wildfire season
Montana fire seasons are long — documentation is what you can't reconstruct after.
When your home burns to the foundation, there is nothing left to photograph. The only proof of what you owned is what you captured before the fire, stored somewhere off your property. Undocumented belongings are the single biggest reason Montana homeowners get underpaid after a total loss.
- Walk every room with your phone and record slow, deliberate video. Open closets, drawers, and cabinets.
- Photograph the front of every appliance and its data plate (brand, model, serial number).
- Keep receipts, order confirmations, and warranty registrations for expensive items.
- Store the whole record off-site — cloud storage, an email to yourself, or a service that keeps a timestamped copy.
4. The Montana insurance reality (no FAIR Plan)
If you're non-renewed. Ask an independent agent to shop specialty and surplus-lines carriers. Document any Firewise USA participation and home-hardening work — mitigation is what keeps or restores coverage.
Consumer help. The Montana Commissioner of Securities & Insurance can help if you feel you're being treated unfairly: 800-332-6148.
If you're non-renewed: Montana Commissioner of Securities & Insurance — 800-332-6148 / csimt.gov.
5. Evacuation planning
- Know your zone. Look up your county's emergency notification system and register. Turn on Wireless Emergency Alerts on your phone.
- Ready — before fire season. Defensible space done. Home-hardening documented. Go-bag packed. Home inventory in the cloud. Two evacuation routes identified. Pet carriers accessible.
- Set — red flag warnings / nearby fire. Move go-bag and valuables to the vehicle. Park facing out. Full tank of gas. Charge phones and battery packs. Close windows and interior doors.
- Go — evacuation order. Do not wait in wind-driven conditions. Take your go-bag, pets in carriers, medications, phone chargers, IDs, insurance info. Wear long sleeves and closed-toe shoes.
- Go-bag basics. N95 masks and goggles, prescription meds, phone chargers + battery pack, cash, copies of ID and policies, a written contact list, water and snacks, pet food and leashes.
6. After a wildfire in Montana
- Do not return until officially cleared. Burned neighborhoods are closed for unstable structures, live wires, hot spots, and hazardous materials.
- Assume ash is toxic. Post-wildfire ash contains heavy metals, asbestos, and other hazards. Wear an N95 or better, gloves, long sleeves, and eye protection.
- Watch for flash floods and debris flows in burn scars. Burned hillsides can't hold water — the first significant rain after a fire can produce dangerous mud and debris flows.
- Document everything before cleanup. Photograph and video the exterior, interior, and every destroyed item. Do not remove debris until your adjuster and any state-managed debris-removal program has inspected.
- Beware post-fire contractor scams. Never pay in full up front, never sign an assignment-of-benefits form under pressure, and verify licensure before hiring.
7. Filing a Montana wildfire claim
- Open the claim immediately. Call your carrier's claims line. Get a claim number and adjuster name in writing.
- Ask about Additional Living Expenses (ALE) on day one. ALE covers hotels, rentals, meals, pet boarding, and mileage above your normal costs while your home is uninhabitable. Save every receipt from the moment you evacuate.
- Document smoke damage aggressively. Smoke penetrates HVAC systems, insulation, drywall, and porous belongings. Get independent air-quality and surface testing if the insurer resists remediation.
- Build the total-loss contents inventory. Use your pre-loss video walkthrough and appliance data-plate photos as the backbone. Reconstruct room by room.
- Keep a claims diary. Date, person, phone number, what was said. Wildfire claims routinely take a year or more.
- If unresolved, call the state insurance regulator. Montana Commissioner of Securities & Insurance: 800-332-6148 (csimt.gov).
8. Montana contacts
| Need | Contact |
|---|---|
| Emergency / report a fire | 911 |
| Montana DNRC (wildfire) | dnrc.mt.gov |
| Montana Commissioner of Securities & Insurance | 800-332-6148 |
| FEMA Disaster Assistance | 1-800-621-3362 |
| Smoke / air quality | airnow.gov |
Frequently asked questions
Official Montana Resources
For the full preparedness, documentation, and claims playbook — plus other state guides as they roll out — see our main Wildfire Preparedness Guide.