Brevard lifts burn ban June 22, but Rockledge-area beach fires stay off-limits
Rockledge FL – Brevard County lifted its open-burning burn ban on June 22, 2026, but beach fires during turtle season still run March 1–Nov. 1.
Brevard County lifted its countywide open-burning burn ban on Monday, June 22, 2026, citing improved drought conditions and a lower Keetch-Byram Drought Index (KBDI) reading. For Rockledge-area residents planning July 4 beach time, the change brings one kind of relief—but it does not mean bonfires are back on Brevard County beaches.
Brevard Fire Rescue’s separate “Fire on the Beach” rules still prohibit any beach fires during turtle season, which runs from March 1 through Nov. 1. That means holiday beach-goers should plan on no campfires/bonfires on the sand even though the broader burn ban was lifted.
What changed on June 22: countywide open-burning restrictions were lifted
In a June 22 announcement, Brevard County said the burn ban was ended after conditions improved, including a drop in the KBDI. The county’s update frames the move as a response to less severe drought indicators (with the KBDI moving into the 350–400 range, after previously being above 500), while emphasizing that wildfire risk isn’t “gone” forever.
The county also said conditions will continue to be monitored. In practical terms, that’s a reminder that restrictions can be adjusted again if conditions worsen.
What didn’t change for Rockledge-area beach plans: turtle-season rules still bar beach fires
Even after the countywide burn ban lift, Brevard Fire Rescue’s “Recreational Fire on the Beach” guidance is still the controlling rule for beach bonfires.
Under that guidance, no fires are permitted on any Brevard County beach from March 1 through Nov. 1. For a July 4 holiday, that window is still active—so residents should assume beach fires remain off-limits for Rockledge-area outings, regardless of the county’s burn-ban status.
This matters because a “burn ban lifted” headline can be easy to misread as a full return of summer beach bonfires. Brevard’s countywide open-burning decision is a different policy lane than the beach fire/turtle-season protection rule.
July 4 planning: what residents should assume and what to check
- No beach campfires/bonfires on Brevard beaches for the July 4 window, since the turtle-season restriction runs March 1–Nov. 1.
- For other burning and yard-related activities, follow the current county guidance—because the county said monitoring continues and restrictions can return if drought or wildfire risk rises again.
- Before lighting anything near vegetation or planning fireworks, check the latest Brevard County and Fire Rescue updates in case conditions change.
What to watch next
Brevard’s message after June 22 is clear: lifting the burn ban is tied to improved conditions, not an elimination of fire risk. For Rockledge residents headed to the beach through summer, the key takeaway is to separate the two rules—county burn ban status versus beach-fire/turtle-season prohibitions—and plan accordingly.
Sources
- Brevard County press release: “Brevard County Burn Ban Lifted” (June 22, 2026)
- Spectrum News 13 / MyNews13: “Brevard County lifts burn ban” (June 22, 2026)
- WDBO / WFTV reporting: Burn bans lifted in Central Florida counties (June 22, 2026)
Discover more from Interactive News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.