January 7, 2026
One year after January 7, 2025, we reflect on the lives lost, the extraordinary courage shown, and the work ahead to rebuild stronger and more resilient communities.
A day that changed Los Angeles County
On January 7, 2025, the Palisades and Eaton wildfires erupted just hours apart under extreme Santa Ana winds — a day that reshaped families, neighborhoods, and futures across Los Angeles County.
Today, we pause to remember those we lost and hold close everyone still carrying grief. We also recognize the countless people whose lives were upended in ways that won’t appear in headlines — displacement, uncertainty, and the long process of putting pieces back together.
The scale of loss
The devastation is difficult to put into words: 31 lives were taken and more than 16,000 structures were destroyed. Behind every address was a story — properties, savings, mementos, and dreams reduced to ash. For many, recovery remains a long, uneven road.
Honoring the heroes
We honor the firefighters, first responders, and community members who ran toward danger, performing extraordinary acts of courage, often at immense personal cost. Their commitment saved lives, protected communities, and continues to inspire.
Hope, resilience, and the resolve to do better
And still, something persists: hope. Hope in neighbors helping neighbors. Hope in rebuild efforts. Hope in the shared determination to learn from what happened—and reduce future loss.
At Property Guardian, we believe resilience is built through both community action and practical risk reduction: mitigation, home hardening, and smarter decision-making that helps communities prepare for a growing wildfire threat.
Our January series: lessons learned and steps forward
Throughout January, Property Guardian will share reflections on the fires — lessons learned, what recovery is teaching us, and practical steps we can take to strengthen resilience, including:
- What drives loss during major wildfire events (especially ember exposure)
- Why home hardening and defensible space matter, and where they’re most effective
- How communities can plan for safer rebuilding and long-term risk reduction
- What we can do, collectively, to better protect people, homes, and livelihoods
How to help
If you’re looking for a meaningful way to contribute, please consider supporting organizations doing vital work for firefighter families, first responders, and community recovery:
- Hotshot Up (supports families of firefighters lost in the line of duty)
- After the Fire USA (supports community-led recovery and resilience in the era of megafire)
- Wildland Firefighter Foundation – 52 Club (supports injured firefighters and families of fallen firefighters)
- Gaits to Healing (equine-assisted therapy supporting first responders, military, veterans, and families)
- US Hotshots Association (emergency relief, scholarships, and support for Hotshots and their families)
We remember. We honor. We rebuild, with purpose.

