
How to Read Smoke on the Fireground: A Guide to the 4 Attributes
First Due Co.
Fire Service Training
Smoke tells you everything about a fire before you step inside. Learn the four attributes: volume, velocity, density, and color, and what they mean for your tactics.
Before you pull a single line, before you mask up, before you even step off the rig, the building is telling you everything you need to know about the fire inside. It is speaking through smoke.
The problem is that most firefighters never learned to listen.
Smoke reading is the single most underrated tactical skill in the fire service. It gives you information about the fire's location, size, stage of development, and flow path, all from the outside, before you commit crews to the interior. And yet it is barely covered in most fire academies beyond "black smoke bad, white smoke not as bad."
That is dangerously oversimplified.
Volume: How Much Smoke
Volume tells you about the size of the fire and the amount of fuel being heated. Thin wisps mean a small fire in early stages or a fire that is distant from the opening you are observing. A moderate plume means a working fire with significant fuel involvement. Massive volume filling the structure means a large fire or multiple rooms involved, likely approaching or past flashover in the fire compartment.
But volume alone does not tell the whole story. A large volume of light-colored smoke is very different from a large volume of dark smoke.
Velocity: How Fast Is It Moving
Velocity tells you about the pressure inside the building, which indicates heat and fire progression. Lazy, drifting smoke means low pressure, a small fire or early in development. A steady push means the fire is producing significant heat and expanding gases. Turbulent, high-pressure smoke being forced out of openings means extreme heat buildup. The fire is pressurizing the compartment. This is a flashover indicator.
When you see high-velocity smoke being pushed under pressure from small openings like door seams, window cracks, and soffit vents, the building is telling you that pressure has nowhere to go. The fire is looking for air. If you open a door or break a window without a coordinated attack, you may feed the fire exactly what it needs to flash.
Density: How Thick Is It
Density tells you about the fuel load and completeness of combustion. Thin, transparent smoke means fuel is burning relatively efficiently or the smoke has traveled far from the fire and cooled. Thick but not opaque smoke means active pyrolysis, significant fuel being heated, a working fire. Dense, opaque smoke that you cannot see through means massive fuel load producing flammable gases faster than they can burn. This is a flashover and backdraft indicator.
Dense smoke is fuel. It is full of carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, and unburned hydrocarbons. If it has enough heat and oxygen, it will ignite. When you see dense black smoke banking down to floor level inside a structure, the entire gas layer above you is fuel waiting for ignition.
Color: What Color Is It
White or light gray smoke means the fire is in early stages, burning cleanly, or moisture is involved. Gray smoke means moderate heating, fuel is pyrolyzing but not fully burning, a working fire. Dark gray to black smoke means hydrocarbon fuels like plastics and synthetics, or late-stage combustion with incomplete burning. Brown or tan smoke means unfinished wood being heated or contents in the early stages of pyrolysis.
Today's residential contents are largely synthetic. Polyurethane foam, plastics, synthetic fabrics. These produce heavy black smoke even in relatively small fires. So black smoke does not automatically mean big fire anymore. It means modern fuel load. Combine color with the other three attributes.
Putting It All Together
Light gray smoke drifting lazily from a second-floor window means a small fire, early stage, probably one room. Offensive attack with a 1 and 3/4 inch line should handle it.
Thick black smoke pushing under moderate pressure from multiple first-floor windows means a working fire with significant fuel involvement. Aggressive interior attack is viable but move quickly.
Dense black smoke under high pressure from every opening, pulsing, with no visible flame means the building is pressurized with superheated unburned fuel. This is a ventilation-limited fire. A backdraft is possible if you introduce air. Do not open doors or windows without a plan.
Heavy smoke from the roofline with nothing showing from the front means the fire is likely on the rear or in the attic space. Walk the building. Do not assume what you see from the front is the whole picture.
First Due Co. gives you 233 plus fire scenarios with realistic scene images showing actual smoke conditions. Give your size-up by voice and the AI grades you on whether you correctly read the conditions. Try it free at firstdueco.com.
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