One year ago, on November 8, 2018, a wildfire tore through Butte County, California, causing 250,000 people to flee their homes. The blaze later hit the town of Paradise, killing 85 people.

One year on, the community is still reeling from the disaster, the deadliest wildfire in the US for more than 100 years, and the clean-up effort drags on.

92% of the town’s population have not returned. Those who did are determined to build a new home there.

Scroll down to see photos of how Paradise and Butte County look today.


On November 8, 2018, the Camp fire broke out in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, spreading at a rate of around 300 ft per second towards the town of Paradise.

Foto: A group of US. Forest Service firefighters monitor a fire at the Camp Fire in Paradise, California, November 8, 2018.sourceREUTERS/Stephen Lam

Source: Insider, KTLA


The town was engulfed by flames a few days later. 85 people died and close to 19,000 buildings were destroyed. Here's what it looks like one year on, a single building rebuilt amidst the destruction.

Foto: Homes destroyed by the Camp fire in Paradise, California, in November 2018.sourceJustin Sullivan/Getty Images

Source: Insider


This composite image shows a ruined mobile home park in Paradise in November 2018, and below, the same park on October 2, 2019.

Foto: An aerial view of a neighborhood burned during the Camp Fire in Paradise on November 2018 (top) and an aerial view of the same area taken on October 2, 2019.sourceGetty

Paradise residents have returned, and are still rebuilding their homes and businesses.

Foto: Homeowner and contractor Carrie Keel rebuilds one of her rental properties in Paradise, California, October 1, 2019, nearly one year after the Camp Fire.sourceGetty

Large swathes of land are still littered with debris and wreckage.

Foto: Rubble is still scattered across a mobile home park almost one year after the Camp Fire destroyed the residential park, October 2, 2019 in Paradise, California. -sourceGetty

Some things survived, but they stand in stark contrast to what was lost.

Foto: Almost one year after the Camp Fire the McDonald's restaurant in Paradise, California still remains in rubble, October 1, 2019.sourceGetty

The cleanup operation is still very much ongoing. The fire caused an estimated $16.5 billion of damage.

Foto: Residential properties that were destroyed almost one year ago in the Camp Fire are cleaned up and ready for rebuilding, October 2, 2019.sourceGetty

Source: Munich RE


Tributes have been laid in advance of the one-year anniversary of the fire on November 8.

Foto: A tribute laid by a series on crosses in Paradise marking the deaths of 85 people.sourceGetty

Volunteers from the community action group Love Paradise are working hard to make as much progress as possible before the one-year anniversary.

Foto: Melissa Crick, a Love Paradise board member and volunteer, speaking to KRCR News ahead of the one-year anniversary in November.sourceKRCR News

Source: KRCR


A total 153,336 acres of land were consumed by fire, and nothing was spared.

Foto: A burnt-out VW Beetle destroyed by the Camp Fire in November 2018, lies rusting a year later in October 2019.sourceABC

Homes were completely destroyed, only identifiable from the brick chimneys which survived.

Foto: Rubble is still scattered across a mobile home park almost one year after the Camp Fire destroyed the residential park, October 2, 2019 isourceGetty

The Camp fire was unprecedented, even for California, where 25% of the state's residents are always exposed to a "very high or extreme fire threat."

Foto: Aerial view of a mobile home park that was destroyed in the Camp Fire, October 2, 2019 in Paradise, California. -sourceGetty

Source: Cal Fire


In some places, wildlife has started to reclaim the wreckage.

Foto: Flowers brighten the burned out remains of a home destroyed by last year's Camp Fire, in Paradise, Calif., Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2019.sourceAP

The last Paradise resident to be accounted for, Sara Martinez-Fabila, was found safe nine months after the fire in August 2019.

Foto: On October 2, 2019, crosses line the road to remember the 85 people who died as a result of the Camp Fire, in Paradise, California, the year before.sourceGetty

Source: KRCRTV


Residents are still coming to terms with the disaster, like the coach of local high school football team Rick Prinz.

Foto: The coach of the local high school football team the Paradise Bobcats, Rick Prinz, at the site of his destroyed home in October 2019.sourceABC

Some residents are still on Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) wait lists to have their homes cleared.

Foto: A ruined home alongside a road in Paradise, California seen in October 2019.sourceGizmodo/Earther

Source: Gizmodo Earther


Much of the rubble is being sifted though to find materials that can be recycled.

Foto: Cal Recycle said on October 29 it had recovered 100 million pounds of scrap metal from the Camp Fire debris in Paradise.sourceCal Recycle/Twitter

Source: Cal Recycle


Multiple Facebook groups of former Paradise residents looking for cherished possessions or charitable donations to get back on their feet are still active.

Foto: Flames burn inside a van as the Camp Fire tears through Paradise, Calif., on, Nov. 8, 2018.sourceAP Photo/Noah Berger

The California governor's office conducted a survey in April 2019 to find out who had returned to Paradise after the fire.

The number of residents had dropped from 26,000 to 2,000, a loss of 92% of the town population.

Source: California Government


This map, made by Camp fire survivor David Forsyth, shows where former residents live in the US now.

Foto: This map shows where people who didn't move back to Paradise after the Camp fire live now.sourceGoogle Maps/My Maps/David Forsyth

Source: Google Maps My Maps


The Camp fire started at 6:33 a.m. on November 8, 2018, and was not totally extinguished until 8:00 a.m. on November 21.

Foto: A satellite view of Paradise, California, on November 8, 2018.sourceNASA Earth Observatory

Source: California Department of Forestry and Fire


The fire was caused by a faulty power line owned by electricity provider Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E.) PG&E must pay more than $500 million to the Camp fire victims.

Foto: A boat left behind after the Paradise fire, pictured in October 2019.sourceGizmodo Earther

PGE has since filed for bankruptcy.

Source: Gizmodo Earther