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Summer Fire & Smoke Risk in Michigan Homes: Grills, Fire Pits & Hidden Hazards

Michigan summers are made for backyard living, grilling on the deck, gathering around the fire pit, setting off fireworks on the Fourth, and spending long evenings outside with family and friends. But the same seasonal habits that make summer enjoyable can also increase the risk of fire and smoke damage to your home.

Outdoor cooking, open flames, consumer fireworks, and even a few overlooked indoor appliances create conditions that fire departments and restoration professionals see play out every summer across Oakland County and Southeast Michigan. Understanding where those risks actually come from, and what to do if something goes wrong, can make a real difference.

Emergency Restoration is based in Troy and provides fire and smoke damage restoration throughout Oakland County and Southeast Michigan, with 24/7 response for soot removal, smoke odor elimination, structural repairs, contents cleaning, and insurance support.

fire damage michigan home

Common Outdoor Fire Causes During Michigan Summers

Grill Fires

Home grilling fires rise sharply during warmer months and peak in July, followed by June, May, and August. According to the National Fire Protection Association, U.S. fire departments responded to an annual average of 12,141 home fires involving grills, hibachis, or barbecues between 2020 and 2024.

Most grill fires are preventable. The most common causes include grease buildup, inadequate clearance from the home, unattended cooking, and propane connection issues. Whether you’re using gas or charcoal, these habits reduce your risk significantly:

  • Keep the grill at least 10 feet from your home’s siding, deck railings, overhangs, and garage.
  • Clean grease trays and cooking grates regularly, accumulated grease is the leading cause of grill flare-ups.
  • Check propane hoses and connections before each use.
  • Never grill inside a garage, covered porch, or any enclosed space.
  • Keep a working fire extinguisher within reach.
  • Stay with the grill while it’s lit.

Fire Pits and Bonfires

Fire pits have become a backyard staple across Michigan, but portable fire bowls and wood-burning pits carry real risk, especially when embers travel into dry grass, mulch, patio cushions, or nearby wood structures.

Tips to keep backyard fires from becoming a problem:

  • Place fire pits on a non-combustible surface, away from decking, fences, and low-hanging branches.
  • Keep flames small and controlled, particularly during dry stretches.
  • Avoid burning during windy conditions, even a light breeze can carry sparks farther than expected.
  • Keep a bucket of water, sand, or a fire extinguisher nearby.
  • Never go inside until embers are fully extinguished and cool to the touch.

Fireworks

Michigan allows consumer fireworks on specific dates in communities that permit them by ordinance, including June 29 through July 4 until 11:45 p.m., with additional date-specific allowances for other holidays. Always check your local municipal ordinance before using consumer fireworks, Troy, Birmingham, Royal Oak, and other Oakland County communities may have additional restrictions.

When using fireworks legally:

  • Use them only in open areas with clear distance from structures, vehicles, dry grass, mulch, and sheds.
  • Never attempt to relight a dud.
  • Keep water nearby at all times.
  • Soak spent fireworks thoroughly before disposing of them.
  • Keep children and pets away from the launch area.
michigan fireworks hazard

Hidden Indoor Fire Hazards Homeowners Often Miss

Outdoor risks get the attention in summer, but some of the most serious hazards are inside the home, and easy to overlook.

Dryer Vents and Lint Buildup

Dryer fires are one of the most underappreciated household hazards. Lint accumulation restricts airflow, causes the dryer to overheat, and can ignite, often with little warning. The Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates approximately 15,500 clothes dryer fires occur annually in the United States.

The warning signs are easy to miss: clothes taking longer than usual to dry, a burning smell during or after a cycle, laundry that comes out unusually hot, or visible lint accumulating around the exterior vent opening. If you notice any of these, stop using the dryer until the vent is inspected.

Good habits:

  • Clean the lint trap after every single load, without exception.
  • Have the dryer vent duct professionally cleaned at least once a year.
  • Never run the dryer when you’re asleep or away from home.

Overloaded Extension Cords and Outdoor Power Use

Summer entertaining means more outdoor electrical demand, patio string lights, outdoor fans, inflatable pools, speakers, and power tools all pulling from extension cords that may not be rated for the load. Overloaded or damaged cords can overheat and ignite nearby combustibles without much visible warning.

  • Use only outdoor-rated extension cords for outdoor use.
  • Avoid daisy-chaining multiple extension cords together.
  • Replace any cord with visible damage, cracking, or exposed wiring.
  • Don’t run cords under rugs, beneath doors, or under patio furniture where heat can’t dissipate.
  • Unplug outdoor cords when not in use.

Candles, Mosquito Torches, and Citronella Flames

Summer gatherings often mean candles on the table and citronella torches along the patio edge. These are easy to forget about mid-party, and proximity to paper plates, napkins, fabric cushions, and curtains makes them a meaningful ignition risk.

  • Keep open flames away from any paper, fabric, or lightweight combustibles.
  • Use stable, weighted holders, not improvised ones.
  • Never leave candles or torches unattended, even briefly.
  • Consider battery-powered flameless alternatives for areas where guests or children are moving around.

Kitchen and Small Appliance Risks

Summer entertaining means more cooking, more countertop appliances running simultaneously, and more distractions. Air fryers, toaster ovens, slow cookers, coffee makers, and countertop grills can all pose risk when left unattended or when outlets are overloaded. Keep appliances away from flammable materials, ensure proper ventilation, and unplug them when not in use.

Download Our Fire Hazards Infographic

Keep your family safe by keeping a copy of our hidden fire hazard guide available in your home. Just click the image for a full sized version, then ctrl+click, or right click and choose save image file for your own copy.

Fire-Safe Habits Every Michigan Homeowner Should Follow

Building a few consistent habits goes a long way toward preventing the situations that lead to fire and smoke damage in the first place.

  • Test smoke alarms monthly and replace batteries annually.
  • Keep fire extinguishers in the kitchen, garage, basement, and near outdoor cooking areas.
  • Create and practice a family fire escape plan, not just once, but regularly.
  • Clean grill grease traps and dryer lint screens as a routine, not an afterthought.
  • Keep mulch, dry leaves, brush, and firewood stored away from the home’s exterior.
  • Store propane tanks outdoors, upright, and away from heat sources.
  • Avoid burning, indoors or out, during windy or prolonged dry conditions.
  • Unplug outdoor extension cords and unused small appliances when you’re done.
  • Keep children and pets clear of grills, fire pits, and fireworks at all times.
  • Check local municipal ordinances before using consumer fireworks each summer holiday.

Michigan summers also bring the threat of lightning strikes, which can cause fires and structural damage even when no outdoor cooking is involved. If your home experiences storm or lightning-related damage, Emergency Restoration responds 24/7 to wind, lightning, hail, and other storm-related property damage as well.

What to Do After Fire or Smoke Damage

Prevention works most of the time. When it doesn’t, how you respond in the first hours matters.

Make Sure Everyone Is Safe First

Evacuate immediately if there is active fire, heavy smoke, or any structural concern. Call 911 for active emergencies. Do not re-enter the home until fire officials have cleared it as safe.

Avoid Touching Soot or Smoke-Damaged Surfaces

This is one of the most common mistakes homeowners make after a fire. Soot is acidic and spreads easily, touching it, wiping it, or walking through it tracks it to unaffected areas and makes restoration harder and more expensive. Leave soot-covered surfaces alone until a professional has assessed the damage.

Document the Damage

If it’s safe to do so, photograph and video every affected area before anything is moved or cleaned. Keep receipts for any emergency expenses, hotels, food, board-up services, and notify your insurance carrier as soon as possible.

Call a Fire and Smoke Damage Restoration Company

Professional restoration companies bring the equipment and expertise that effective fire and smoke cleanup requires: air scrubbers, ozone machines, CO2 blasting, ultrasonic cleaning tanks, and smoke odor removal systems. Emergency Restoration handles both the structural and contents side of fire losses, including pack-out services, soot removal, smoke odor elimination, and insurance claim support.

When Smoke Damage Reaches Your Belongings

Smoke doesn’t stay in the room where the fire started. It travels through air ducts, open doorways, wall cavities, and porous materials, leaving residue and odor on furniture, clothing, documents, appliances, electronics, and personal keepsakes far from the source of the fire.

Content restoration after fire or smoke damage covers cleaning and restoring furniture, textiles, and other personal belongings that have been affected. For smaller losses, cleaning can often be done on-site. For larger or more complex losses, a pack-out service removes items to a secure facility for cleaning, drying, and storage during the restoration process.

Electronics deserve special attention. Smoke particulate can penetrate fans, vents, and circuit boards, and corrosive soot accelerates damage quickly. Specialized electronics restoration after smoke damage can recover, repair, or replace residential and business electronics, including TVs, computers, appliances, and other equipment, that might otherwise be written off.

Fire Damage Help in Troy, Oakland County, and Southeast Michigan

Emergency Restoration is based in Troy and serves homeowners and businesses throughout Oakland County and Southeast Michigan. Whether the loss is from a grill fire, a dryer fire, a candle, or a more significant structural fire, the company responds 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Service areas include Troy, Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Berkley, Pontiac, Rochester Hills, Royal Oak, Sterling Heights, and Utica, as well as the broader Metro Detroit area. If you’re not sure whether your community is covered, call, response coverage is extensive across Southeast Michigan.

Local service pages:

Related Reading

If you found this useful, these articles cover related risks that Michigan homeowners face in the warmer months:

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