Risk Visibility
Understand where your property is most exposed and why those points matter.
Know Your Property Before Fire Season
Identify key vulnerabilities around your home and prioritise practical steps to reduce wildfire exposure.
A property risk assessment gives homeowners a clearer picture of how wildfire threats can interact with the home environment. We assess likely ember entry pathways, radiant heat exposure points, and layout factors that may increase vulnerability during severe fire conditions. This service is practical and action-focused, helping households understand where to start and what to address first.
Instead of generic advice, we look at your specific property context and produce usable recommendations. That includes priorities for preparation, what can be improved before peak season, and how the Ember Stopper system can support your wider bushfire readiness. For families in bushfire and wildfire prone areas, a structured risk view can remove uncertainty and support better decisions under pressure.
We review site layout, building edges, adjacent fuels, and potential ember collection points around the property. We then identify practical mitigation actions and sequence them by urgency and effort. Recommendations include pre-season tasks, maintenance priorities, and integration opportunities with deployable cover protection. We also discuss household preparedness behaviours that support safe execution when danger ratings rise.
Expect clear findings with practical next steps, not technical jargon. We explain why each risk matters, what can be done about it, and when action should occur. Homeowners can expect guidance aligned to Australian wildfire context, where early preparation and official warning awareness are both essential. The service aims to improve readiness, confidence, and planning clarity.
Understand where your property is most exposed and why those points matter.
Receive practical steps in an order that supports realistic preparation timelines.
Integrate assessment findings with cover deployment and evacuation planning.
Yes. Ember attack can travel well ahead of the fire front, so suburban and urban-fringe homes can face serious ignition pressure.
At least annually before fire season, and after any major landscaping, building, or boundary changes that alter exposure.
We provide preparedness guidance and timing principles, but emergency directions from authorities should always be followed as the primary source of evacuation instruction.