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πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations/Wildfire Zones

Wildfire Zones: Sterling Heights vs Warren

How do wildfire zones rules compare between Sterling Heights, MI and Warren, MI?

Warren has fewer restrictions than Sterling Heights.

Sterling Heights, MI

Macomb County

Some Restrictions

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

View full Sterling Heights rules β†’

Warren, MI

Macomb County

Few Restrictions

Macomb County is not a designated wildfire-hazard region. It sits in Michigan's densely developed southern Lower Peninsula, where the state has no Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zones or wildland-urban-interface fire code. There are no defensible-space, ember-resistant construction, or fuel-modification mandates. Standard local fire and open-burning rules apply.

View full Warren rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactSterling HeightsWarren
Zone 10 to 30 feet clearance-
Zone 230 to 100 feet reduced fuel-
MaterialsFire-resistant may be required-
InsuranceMay require compliance-
Wildfire hazard zone-None designated
WUI fire code-Not adopted
Defensible space-Not required
Region-Southern Lower Peninsula

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Sterling Heights 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 Sterling Heights wildfire areas.

Is my property in a wildfire zone?

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

Warren FAQ

Is Macomb County in a wildfire zone?

No. Michigan does not designate Macomb County as a wildfire-hazard area, and there is no wildland-urban-interface code or defensible-space mandate. The county is in the developed southern Lower Peninsula.

Do I need fire-resistant construction for wildfire risk?

No wildfire-zone construction standards apply in Macomb County. Fire risk is managed through ordinary local open-burning and recreational-fire rules, not ember-resistant building requirements.

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