Command your incident, not your paperwork
Fireground Atlas replaces fragmented radio calls, clipboards, and memory with a single real-time platform that keeps every crew member informed and every commander in control.

Everything you need on the fireground
Purpose-built tools that replace the patchwork of radios, whiteboards, and gut instinct with reliable, real-time incident data.
Live Hydrant & Preplan Maps
Access every hydrant location, flow rate, and building preplan in real time. No more flipping through binders or radioing dispatch for data that should be at your fingertips.
Crew Accountability Tracking
Know exactly where every firefighter is on the fireground. Digital PAR checks, SCBA timers, and role assignments replace error-prone manual tracking.
Unified Incident Communications
Consolidate radio traffic, text commands, and status updates into a single shared feed. Reduce missed transmissions and information silos during critical operations.
Safety-First Alerting
Automatic mayday triggers, evacuation tones, and air-supply warnings keep your crew safe without relying on someone remembering to watch the clock.
Mobile-Ready Command
Run your incident from a ruggedized tablet or phone. Fireground Atlas works offline-first so connectivity dead zones never leave you blind.
Post-Incident Reports in Minutes
Every decision, benchmark, and timeline is captured automatically. Generate NFIRS-ready reports without hours of manual reconstruction after the scene.

From chaos to clarity in seconds
When tones drop, every second matters. Fireground Atlas automatically pulls preplans, hydrant data, and crew rosters the moment dispatch assigns the run, so your team arrives informed and ready to work.
- Auto-populated preplan data on dispatch
- One-tap PAR checks across all divisions
- Offline-first architecture for rural coverage gaps
- NFIRS-compliant reporting built in
Ready to modernize your fireground?
Join forward-thinking departments already using Fireground Atlas to keep their crews safer, their commanders informed, and their reports written before they leave the scene.