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πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations/Wildfire Zones

Wildfire Zones: Everett vs Lynnwood

How do wildfire zones rules compare between Everett, WA and Lynnwood, WA?

Everett and Lynnwood have similar restriction levels.

Everett, WA

Snohomish County

Some Restrictions

Everett may have wildfire hazard zones requiring defensible space around structures, fire-resistant building materials, and vegetation management.

View full Everett rules β†’

Lynnwood, WA

Snohomish County

Some Restrictions

Washington's Wildland-Urban Interface Code applies to parcels mapped high or very-high wildfire hazard. On those parcels, new construction requires class-1 ignition-resistant roofs, exterior walls, and decks, plus driveway access standards. The rules took statewide effect July 1, 2023 under RCW 19.27.560.

View full Lynnwood rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactEverettLynnwood
Zone 10 to 30 feet clearance-
Zone 230 to 100 feet reduced fuel-
MaterialsFire-resistant may be required-
InsuranceMay require compliance-
Trigger-High/very-high hazard mapped parcel
Roof standard-Class A roof assembly
Walls-1-hour or ignition-resistant materials
Driveway rule-Access if wall >150 ft from road
Effective-Statewide July 1, 2023

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Everett FAQ

How much defensible space do I need?

Typically 30 feet of lean/clean zone and 100 feet of reduced fuel zone around structures in Everett wildfire areas.

Is my property in a wildfire zone?

Check with Everett fire department or your state wildfire hazard map. Real estate disclosures must include wildfire zone status.

Lynnwood FAQ

How do I know if my property is in a wildfire zone?

Wildfire hazard is set by statewide and local hazard/risk maps under RCW 19.27.560. Contact Snohomish County Planning and Development Services or the Fire Marshal to check whether your parcel is mapped high or very-high hazard.

What must I do if I build in a high-hazard area?

New construction must meet class-1 ignition-resistant standards: a class-A roof, ignition-resistant or one-hour exterior walls, protected decks, and driveway access requirements under the Washington WUI Code.

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