• 1990.
Auckland, New Zealand 22 to 29 April – 1,800 athletes, 17 countries, 34 events. Winners:
New Zealand • 1992.
Las Vegas, United States 16 to 22 May – 4,000 athletes, 22 countries, 45 events. Winners: United States • 1994.
Perth, Australia 20 to 26 March – 2,000 athletes, 21 countries, 48 events. Winners: Australia • 1996.
Edmonton, Canada 28 July to 3 August, 2,300 athletes, 25 countries, 54 events. Winners: Canada • 1998.
Durban, South Africa 17 to 23 May – 1,800 athletes, 26 countries, 55 events. Winners: South Africa • 2000.
Mantes-La-Jolie, France 6 to 13 July – 4,000 athletes, 56 countries, 61 events. Winners: France • 2002.
Christchurch, New Zealand 26 October to 2 November – 1,500 athletes, 30 countries, 58 events. Winners:
New Zealand Fire Service • 2004.
Sheffield, England 28 August to 4 September – 2,500 athletes, 40 countries, 59 events. Winners:
England • 2006.
Hong Kong 18 to 25 February – 3,000 athletes, 37 countries, 59 events. Winners:
China • 2008.
Liverpool, England 25 August to 3 September – 3,000 athletes, 46 countries, 74 events. Winners:
England • 2010.
Daegu, South Korea, 21–29 August – 5,230 participants, 46 countries, 75 events. Winners Korean Fire Service • 2012.
Sydney, Australia, 19–28 October – 1,500 athletes, 30 countries, 60 events. Winners:
Australia (the Sydney 2012 World Firefighters Games were conducted by WFG Events Pty Ltd under Licence from World Firefighters Games WA Inc) • 2018.
Chungju, South Korea, 10–17 September 2018. The largest number of competitors to attend the games 6,600 • 2020.
Aalborg, Denmark, postponed to 2024 • 2022.
Lisbon, Portugal, 30 April – 7 May 2022. The games returned post COVID-19 with over 40 countries in attendance. • 2024.
Aalborg, Denmark, 7 to 14 September 2024 • 2026.
Khobar, Saudi Arabia, 5 to 13 November 2026 ==Results==