{
  "slug": "firefighter-duty-death",
  "question": "What are the odds of a career firefighter dying in the line of duty over a full career?",
  "category": "crime",
  "tags": [
    "workplace"
  ],
  "no_reliable_estimate": false,
  "perceived": {
    "description": "Firefighting occupies a singular place in the American cultural imagination as the quintessential dangerous job. Films, memorials, and newsroom coverage all amplify the image of extreme hazard. Most laypeople — and many firefighters themselves — substantially overestimate the traumatic-death component of the risk, picturing dramatic structural collapses and inferno deaths as the dominant cause. In reality, cardiac events consistently account for roughly 45–50% of all line-of-duty firefighter deaths, and the all-cause career mortality rate, while genuinely elevated above the US worker average, is lower than most assume. No rigorous population survey isolating \"perceived lifetime death risk for a career firefighter\" has been located; this entry uses editorial intuition.\n",
    "rough_estimate": "Most people likely guess career firefighter LODD risk at several percent over a career; the actual all-cause figure is closer to 0.2–0.3%",
    "kind": "intuition"
  },
  "native": {
    "display": "~30 career firefighter line-of-duty deaths per year (2018–2023 average, all causes)",
    "numerator": 30,
    "denominator": 370000,
    "unit": "on-duty deaths per career firefighter per year",
    "population": "career (paid) firefighters in the United States"
  },
  "normalized": {
    "lifetime_us_adult": 0.0022,
    "display": "~1 in 450 over a 30-year career (all-cause, career firefighters only)",
    "log_value": -2.66,
    "assumptions": "Reference subgroup: a career (paid, non-volunteer) firefighter in the United States serving a full 30-year career in a municipal department.\nNumerator: The NFPA \"Fatal Firefighter Injuries in the United States\" annual report documented 30 career firefighter line-of-duty deaths in 2023, 39 in 2022, 33 in 2018, and 20 in 2019 (the historical low for the decade). Across the 2018–2023 period (excluding the anomalous 2020–2021 COVID-era reporting, when cardiac deaths within 24 hours of duty were counted differently), the annual career LODD count averages approximately 30 deaths per year — all causes, including both traumatic injuries and sudden cardiac events. The NFPA reports cover deaths occurring during suppression, vehicle response, training, non-fire emergencies, and non-emergency station duties.\nDenominator: The NFPA's \"U.S. Fire Department Profile\" (2020 data, published 2022) reports approximately 370,000 career firefighters nationally. BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OES) for May 2022 counted 321,450 paid firefighters, a somewhat narrower measure (excludes some supervisory ranks counted by NFPA). This entry uses 370,000 as the denominator, consistent with NFPA's own denominator for fatality rate calculations.\nAnnual rate: 30 / 370,000 = 8.1 per 100,000 per year.\n30-year career risk: 1 − (1 − 0.000081)^30 ≈ 0.0024 (0.24%), roughly 1 in 415.\nScope declared as activity_specific_lifetime because this is the career-accumulated risk for a specific occupation, not a general-population lifetime figure. It is not directly comparable to the population-level lifetime risks shown for other Likelier entries.\nTraumatic-only subset (fireground collapse, vehicle crash, struck-by): Career firefighters die from cardiac events at a higher proportion than volunteers (the burn-care study by Witkiewitz et al., 2018, found volunteers have OR 1.8 for trauma deaths vs career). Cardiac events account for approximately 45–50% of all LODD deaths (PMC3710100). Excluding cardiac, traumatic-only career LODD deaths average roughly 15–17 per year. At 16/370,000 ≈ 4.3 per 100,000/year, the 30-year traumatic-only career risk is approximately 0.13% (1 in 750). The all-cause figure is used as the headline because NFPA's own \"Fatal Firefighter Injuries\" framing encompasses both traumatic and cardiac on-duty deaths as equally reportable occupational hazards.\nComparison: US average worker occupational fatality rate (BLS CFOI) is approximately 3.4–3.5 per 100,000 FTE workers per year. Career firefighters at ~8 per 100,000/year run roughly 2.3× the all-worker average — elevated but far below the ~25/100,000 for fishing and ~20/100,000 for logging workers (the most dangerous civilian occupations by BLS fatality rate).\n",
    "uncertainty": {
      "low": 0.0012,
      "high": 0.0038
    },
    "scope": "activity_specific_lifetime"
  },
  "sources": [
    {
      "url": "https://www.nfpa.org/education-and-research/research/nfpa-research/fire-statistical-reports/fatal-firefighter-injuries",
      "title": "Firefighter Fatalities in the United States — Annual NFPA Report Series",
      "publisher": "National Fire Protection Association (Richard Campbell, lead author)",
      "source_type": "reputable_reference",
      "statistic": "89 on-duty firefighter fatalities in 2023, of which 30 were career firefighters; 62 fatalities in 2024, of which 26 were career firefighters; 97 total in 2022 of which 39 were career; cardiac events account for approximately 45–50% of all LODD deaths historically",
      "excerpt": "\"Reductions in the number of fatalities among career firefighters accounted for most of the overall decline, with a 23% drop from 39 deaths in 2022 to 30 in 2023.\" \"The largest share of deaths (32) occurred while firefighters were operating at fires or explosions, representing 36 percent of the total number of fatalities.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2024-07-01",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-10",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260506074238/https://www.nfpa.org/education-and-research/research/nfpa-research/fire-statistical-reports/fatal-firefighter-injuries",
      "calculation_notes": "NFPA annual report series documents on-duty deaths for all US firefighters by employment type (career, volunteer, wildland, military). Career deaths by year from reports: 2023 = 30, 2022 = 39, 2021 elevated due to COVID-era counting, 2019 = 20, 2018 = 33. Six-year (2018–2023) average ≈ 30/year for career firefighters. Rate: 30 / 370,000 (NFPA career firefighter population) = 8.1 per 100,000/year. 30-year career risk: 1 − (1 − 8.1×10⁻⁵)^30 = 0.0024 ≈ 1 in 415.\n",
      "independence_note": "NFPA collects fatality data independently from USFA/FEMA through its own survey of fire departments. Both the NFPA and USFA series draw on the same underlying incident reports but compile them through separate channels, providing corroboration.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://www.usfa.fema.gov/statistics/reports/firefighters-departments/firefighter-fatalities.html",
      "title": "Annual Report on Firefighter Fatalities in the United States — USFA/FEMA",
      "publisher": "U.S. Fire Administration / FEMA",
      "source_type": "govt_report",
      "statistic": "82 firefighter line-of-duty deaths in 2018, of which 33 were career firefighters; USFA tracks all on-duty deaths through the National Firefighter Registry and publishes annual reports",
      "excerpt": "\"33 career [firefighter fatalities] (5 rural, 28 urban/suburban)\" in 2018. \"82 firefighters died in the line of duty last year, five fewer than the 87 who died in 2017.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2019-10-01",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-10",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260514061946/https://www.usfa.fema.gov/statistics/reports/firefighters-departments/firefighter-fatalities.html",
      "calculation_notes": "USFA reports confirm the NFPA career-firefighter death counts. 2018 career total = 33, consistent with the 2018–2023 average of approximately 30 career deaths per year used in the native rate calculation. USFA data is the primary government accountability source for the numerator; NFPA's denominator (370,000 career firefighters from Fire Department Profile surveys) is used for rate computation.\n",
      "independence_note": "USFA/FEMA is the primary US government tracking authority for firefighter LODDs, operating independently of NFPA. USFA data flows through the National Firefighter Registry, which receives incident reports from fire departments and coroners. NFPA conducts a parallel survey. The two series have historically agreed within 5–10 deaths per year on total LODD counts, providing strong mutual corroboration.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3710100/",
      "title": "Extreme sacrifice: sudden cardiac death in the US Fire Service",
      "publisher": "Occupational & Environmental Medicine / Geibe JR et al.",
      "source_type": "peer_reviewed",
      "statistic": "Sudden cardiac death accounts for approximately 45–50% of all line-of-duty firefighter fatalities over the past 40 years; fire suppression activity accounts for over 30% of line-of-duty cardiac deaths despite representing only 1–5% of annual working time; risk during fire suppression is 10–100× baseline non-emergency risk",
      "excerpt": "\"SCEs are responsible for the leading cause of on-duty deaths over the past 40 years (≈45–50%).\" \"Although fire suppression duties were found to represent between 1% and 5% of a firefighter's annual working time, fire suppression activity accounted for more than 30% of line-of-duty CHD deaths.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2013-07-01",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-10",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260309194039/https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3710100/",
      "calculation_notes": "Used to establish the cardiac vs traumatic split in career LODD deaths. If ~47% of the 30-per-year career LODD average are cardiac, traumatic-only career deaths ≈ 16/year. Traumatic-only 30-year career risk ≈ 1 − (1 − 16/370000)^30 ≈ 0.0013 (0.13%, about 1 in 750). This is the lower end of the uncertainty band. The all-cause rate (0.24%) anchors the headline; the traumatic-only rate anchors the uncertainty low bound.\n",
      "independence_note": "Peer-reviewed medical literature independent of NFPA and USFA administrative data series. Provides the physiological and epidemiological basis for the cardiac/traumatic death split and activity-specific risk magnitudes.\n"
    }
  ],
  "comparison_anchors": [
    {
      "label": "Police officer (career, all-cause LODD)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.0018
    },
    {
      "label": "US average worker (occupational fatality, 30-year career)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.001
    },
    {
      "label": "Commercial fisherman (career LODD)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.007
    }
  ],
  "personal_factor_multipliers": [
    {
      "factor": "Interior structural attack role (primary suppression)",
      "multiplier": 2.5,
      "notes": "NFPA fatality data show that deaths at structure fires and explosions account for 32–36% of all LODDs despite suppression being a fraction of duty time. Firefighters assigned primarily to interior attack (engine companies) face a substantially higher exposure to the structural collapse, entrapment, and extreme-heat events that drive traumatic deaths vs command, investigation, or prevention roles."
    },
    {
      "factor": "Poor cardiovascular fitness / fails IAFF WFI standards",
      "multiplier": 3.5,
      "notes": "Cardiac events are ~45-50% of all LODD deaths (PMC3710100). The IAFF/IAFC Wellness-Fitness Initiative (WFI) departments show lower cardiac fatality rates. An estimated 56% of firefighters do not meet the recommended aerobic fitness standard of 42 mL/kg/min (PMC10888326). Poor cardiovascular fitness is the dominant modifiable risk factor for the largest single cause of firefighter LODD."
    },
    {
      "factor": "Rural or small department with single-engine response",
      "multiplier": 2,
      "notes": "NFPA and USFA data consistently show higher per-firefighter fatality rates in smaller departments. In 2018 USFA data, 5 of 33 career deaths were rural vs 28 urban/suburban — but rural departments employ far fewer career firefighters proportionally, implying a higher rate. Vehicle crashes (a leading traumatic cause) are disproportionately rural. Reduced crew size also increases entrapment risk."
    },
    {
      "factor": "Regular physical fitness assessment pass (protective)",
      "multiplier": 0.4,
      "notes": "IAFF/IAFC Wellness-Fitness Initiative: departments with mandatory fitness programs and annual medical evaluations show substantially reduced cardiac LODD rates. Given cardiac events are ~45-50% of all LODDs, a 50-60% reduction in cardiac risk through fitness translates to a meaningful overall LODD rate reduction."
    }
  ],
  "short_label": "Firefighter duty death",
  "myth_framing": "overrated",
  "outcome_severity": "fatal",
  "exposure_pattern": "recurring",
  "outcome_type": "death",
  "valence": "negative",
  "caveats": "All-cause LODD figures include both traumatic injuries (structural collapse, vehicle crash, struck-by) and sudden cardiac events occurring on duty or within 24 hours of duty. Cardiac events represent approximately 45–50% of career firefighter LODDs. The traumatic- only 30-year career risk is lower, approximately 0.13% (1 in 750). The 2020–2021 data years were excluded from the rate average because NFPA changed cardiac-death reporting to capture events within 24 hours of duty rather than during duty only, inflating those totals (141 deaths in 2021 vs 65 in 2019). Volunteer firefighters (approximately 70% of all US firefighters) are excluded — they have a different exposure profile and generally higher per-firefighter traumatic death rates than career firefighters (OR 1.8 per peer-reviewed literature). Cancer-related deaths among firefighters are not counted in LODD statistics and are a separate, substantial occupational hazard — firefighters have approximately 9% greater cancer incidence and 14% higher cancer mortality than the general population, and occupational cancer is now cited as the leading overall cause of firefighter death when on-duty, off-duty, and career exposures are combined.\n",
  "quality_score": {
    "d1": 5,
    "d2": 5,
    "d3": 5,
    "d4": 4,
    "d5": 5,
    "d6": 5,
    "d7": 4,
    "d8": 5,
    "avg": 4.75,
    "scored_by": "claude-code-8d",
    "scored_at": "2026-05-25",
    "methodology_version": "1.2"
  },
  "reviewer": "8d-eval-2026-05-16",
  "last_reviewed": "2026-05-16",
  "reviewed": true,
  "generated_at": "2026-05-10",
  "image": {
    "alt": "An empty firefighter helmet resting on a plain surface, flat vector editorial illustration."
  },
  "attribution": "Likelier — https://likelier.app",
  "license": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/",
  "support": "https://buymeacoffee.com/kgluszczyk?via=likelier&utm_content=api-fear-single",
  "canonical_url": "https://likelier.app/firefighter-duty-death"
}