The map shows fire locations but not mandatory evacuation zones or closed roads (e.g., EN2, A13). For that, you need to cross-reference with ANEPC’s emergency alerts (via SMS/Cell Broadcast) or Google Maps traffic. This fragmentation is dangerous.
While there’s no app, the site works reasonably well on phones. Pinch-to-zoom, click icons for details, and share direct links to specific coordinates – useful for WhatsApp groups in rural areas. mapa incêndios portugal
The interface defaults to Portuguese. While icons are intuitive, key alerts, fire statuses, and risk descriptors are not fully translated into English or French. For the 4+ million tourists in Algarve and Alentejo during fire season, this reduces usability significantly. The map shows fire locations but not mandatory
No paywalls, no registration, no ads. It’s a pure public service tool. The Bad (Where It Frustrates) 1. No Push Notifications This is the biggest miss. You cannot set a geofence around your home or vacation rental. To know if a fire starts near you, you must refresh the map manually. In a fast-moving fire (e.g., 2022’s Ourém fire spread 10 km in 45 minutes), this is a dangerous limitation. Third-party apps like Fogos.pt or Windy.com often do a better job at proactive alerts. While there’s no app, the site works reasonably
Active fire boundaries are often shown as rough polygons based on satellite detection – which can lag 1–3 hours. Ground truth (from firefighters) is sometimes missing. As a result, you might see a “contained” fire that still has active flanks, or a “large” polygon where the fire has already moved on.