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The Great Car Fire Panic: A Calm Look at the Data Nobody Clicked For

Posted on January 6, 2026February 20, 2026 by Sherri Hartlen-Neely

Public discussion about cars—especially electric vehicles—often centers on isolated incidents rather than scale. Headlines about a single dramatic vehicle fire can dominate the news cycle, while broader questions about how often fires occur, which vehicles are actually involved, and what ownership really costs over time are rarely examined together. When you zoom out and look at the full U.S. vehicle fleet, a much calmer and more informative picture emerges.

As of November 2024, the United States had approximately 286 million registered motor vehicles on the road. That total includes passenger cars, trucks, buses, motorcycles, and other registered vehicle types. By powertrain, the fleet breaks down roughly as follows:

PowertrainEstimated Vehicles (Millions)Share of U.S. Fleet
Internal Combustion Engine (ICE)270–272~94%
Self-Charging Hybrid (HEV)10–11~4%
Plug-in Hybrid (PHEV)2–3~1%
Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV)3.5–3.8~1–1.3%

This context is essential when evaluating safety, cost, or risk.

No U.S. agency currently publishes a finalized national table of vehicle fires broken down by powertrain. However, national totals from the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), combined with registered-fleet data and consistently reported relative risk ratios, allow for a reliable fleet-adjusted estimate.

For 2024, the best available estimate is: Approximately 211,500 vehicle fires occurred in the United States. When those fires are distributed proportionally across the actual fleet sizes, the breakdown looks like this:

PowertrainEstimated Share of Vehicle Fires
Internal Combustion Engine (ICE)90.2%
Self-Charging Hybrid (HEV)7.9%
Plug-in Hybrid (PHEV)1.9%
Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV)0.2%

That means battery electric vehicles account for only a few hundredths of a percent of all vehicle fires nationwide.

This does not mean EV fires never happen. It means that when exposure—the number of vehicles actually on the road—is accounted for, BEVs represent a very small share of total incidents. Most vehicle fires, regardless of powertrain, stem from familiar causes: Collisions, fuel leaks, electrical faults, overheating components, or poor maintenance.

Safety, Cost, and Reality—Together

When fire risk, operating cost, and fleet size are viewed together, several conclusions become clear:

  • Vehicle fires are rare relative to total vehicles on the road, and most involve conventional combustion engines simply because they dominate the fleet.
  • BEV fires receive disproportionate attention compared to their actual share of incidents.
  • Average weekly driving habits already fit comfortably within the capabilities of most modern vehicles.
  • Ownership cost differences over time often matter more than purchase price alone.

None of this suggests a single “correct” vehicle choice. Different drivers have different needs, access to charging, driving patterns, and budgets. What it does suggest is that context matters—and that decisions grounded in data tend to look very different from those driven by headlines alone.

Sources

  • JoryPepper Communications Podcast
  • Federal Highway Administration, November 25, 2025
  • National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), November 1, 2025
  • National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), November 1, 2025
  • Fairfax County, Virginia, February 12, 2024
  • Kelley Blue Book, January 28, 2022
  • IEEE Spectrum, December 4, 2023
  • U.S. Department of of Energy, Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation, Information pulled on December 21, 2025
  • US. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration; June 2, 2025
  • U.S. Energy Information Administration, Information pulled on December 21, 2025.
  • AAA Exchange, Information pulled on December 21, 2025.
  • National Transportation Safety Board, Information pulled on December 21, 2025.
  • United States Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, Information pulled December 21, 2025.
  • Edmunds, Information pulled December 21, 2025.
  • U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Information pulled December 21, 2025.
  • Environmental Protection Agency, Information pulled December 21, 2025.
  • Consumer Reports, Information pulled December 21, 2025
  • SAE International, Information pulled December 21, 2025
  • U.S. Department of Energy, Information pulled December 21, 2025
  • U.S. Fire Administration, Information pulled December 21, 2025

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