A Spare the Air Alert will blanket the Bay Area this Thursday, and that cozy crackling fire you were dreaming about is officially off the table. Wood burning is banned across the nine-county region after weather forecasters warned of a buildup of fine-particle pollution. The prohibition covers fireplaces, wood stoves, outdoor fire pits, and most other solid-fuel burning, both indoors and outdoors, with only narrow exemptions for homes that have no other source of heat. Officials say the smoke is especially dangerous for children, older adults and people with heart or lung conditions, and first-time violators who turn down an offered awareness class can be hit with a $100 ticket. Residents are urged to confirm the official status and options before lighting any kind of wood fire.
According to Spare the Air, Thursday’s alert lists “Wood Burning Prohibited” across the San Francisco Bay Area, with concentrations of fine particulate matter expected to be elevated. The agency notes that the alert applies regionwide and urges residents to avoid smoky activities that add to wintertime PM2.5 levels.
What’s banned, who’s exempt and penalties
The Bay Area Air Quality Management District makes it illegal to use fireplaces, wood stoves, pellet stoves, manufactured logs or outdoor fire pits on Spare the Air days unless a household qualifies for an exemption. According to the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, exemptions are limited to homes without permanently installed heating. First-time violators are typically offered a wood-smoke awareness course, and anyone who declines that option can receive a $100 citation, with steeper fines for repeat offenses.
Why officials called the alert
Winter weather patterns, including cold nights, light winds and a temperature inversion that traps smoke near the ground, are the usual setup for midwinter Spare the Air days, and forecasters cited that mix again this week. The Air District also tightened its Wood-Burning Rule last fall, lowering the PM2.5 trigger from 35 to 25 micrograms per cubic meter, a change the San Francisco Chronicle reported could lead to more frequent alerts going forward.
How to check the burn status and avoid a ticket
The Spare the Air website and text system provide the official daily status so no one has to guess. You can visit Spare the Air, text “START” to 81757 to get alerts straight to your phone, or call 1-877-4NO-BURN to confirm whether burning is allowed. Natural gas, propane and electric fireplaces are permitted during alerts and serve as practical stand-ins for heat or ambiance. If you rely on wood burning for heat and genuinely have no alternative, you can register your EPA-certified device with the Air District to find out whether you qualify for an exemption.
Who should be most careful…