FDIC International returned to Indianapolis from 7 to 12 April, bringing 37,081 registered professionals to the Indiana Convention Center and Lucas Oil Stadium for six days of training, technology demonstrations and peer exchange.
Founded in 1929 as a modest forum on instructor standards, the conference now hosts more than 800 exhibiting companies and welcomes delegations from 55 countries, among them Colombia, Mexico, China, the United Kingdom and Australia.
International Fire & Safety Journal attended throughout the week, speaking with readers, watching classroom sessions and following product debuts that sketched a clear picture of where the fire service is heading.
The event opened with an address by Eric Schlett, executive vice-president of Clarion Fire Rescue Group: “You are the heart and soul of this event and your presence here today reflects the unwavering dedication and courage that defines the fire service.”
That message framed a programme that mixed hard-nosed realism with strategic debate. By the closing bell, visitors had taken part in hands-on evolutions, leadership summits, wellness workshops and evening receptions that turned aisles of apparatus into informal classrooms.
Figures released after the show revealed that forty-two percent of attendees were first-timers and thirty-six percent held an EMS certification, a reminder that FDIC continues to draw fresh talent as well as seasoned officers.
FDIC split its educational offer into two distinct phases. The first forty-eight hours focused on hands-on training that put firefighters inside live-fire compartments, rope systems and restricted-visibility mazes. Organisers stress that every scenario “replicates real-life incidents, ensuring firefighters experience the heat, stress and complexity of emergency response.”
Instructors emphasised disciplined size-up, controlled ventilation and crew communication. Observers noted how the drills linked directly to later classroom sessions, where speakers presented ventilation flow-paths recorded with thermal cameras and discussed lithium-ion battery behaviour in sealed cargo holds.
Across the week more than 230 hours of accredited instruction were available, enabling participants to collect continuing education credits recognised by state and national agencies.
One lieutenant from Ohio explained that his twenty-four hours on command strategy will satisfy a promotional board requirement, underlining how the conference blends inspiration with career pragmatism. Certificates remain downloadable until 31 December 2025.
From the moment the exhibit floor opened, heavy apparatus stole the spotlight. Ferrara and Rosenbauer rolled in new pumpers, while REV Fire Group fielded fourteen vehicles ranging from municipal engines to an airport crash truck. Pierce showed its electric Enforcer Volterra and a Velocity 100-foot aerial platform, proving that alternative powertrains are no longer prototypes but purchase-ready solutions.
Spartan used the show to mark fifty years in business with the S-180 pumper series, the Smeal Type 1 pumper and the battery-electric Vector. Even small tools carried forward the theme of multifunctional design: CMC’s Swivo merged a swivel, pulley and carabiner into one unit for confined-space kits, while Bullard staged outdoor drills using a new thermal-imaging camera that streamed live pictures to a critique zone outside Lucas Oil Stadium.
Personal protective equipment followed the same arc toward lighter, smarter gear. MSA Safety launched the G1 SCBA XR Edition and the Globe G-Xtreme Pro jacket, while Fire-Dex demonstrated a Virtual Sizer that uses artificial intelligence and anthropometric data to predict turnout fit.
Alongside hoses and hardware, the conference gave equal stage time to human sustainability. The Health and Wellness area offered talks on mental resilience, cancer prevention and nutrition for high-stress shift work. Sessions such as “Firefighters’ perspectives on mental performance support” and “Nutrition and recovery” moved beyond theory with practical planning sheets that departments can fold into annual medicals.
Memorial Park inside Lucas Oil Stadium remained a quiet space for reflection, while the adjacent Puppy Park provided first-time adopters with canine companionship. Three dogs found homes by week’s end, including Athena who left the shelter system after 116 days and now lives with a Massachusetts firefighter.
Evening receptions knitted the crowd together in more informal ways. Officers from small volunteer houses compared funding models with metropolitan chiefs and an impromptu patch-swap table near the stadium escalator became a daily reunion point where uniforms from four continents traded crests and stories.
FDIC’s growing international presence coloured every hallway conversation. Delegations from Bogotá, Mexico City, London and Brisbane used the trip to benchmark equipment against American specifications. A Colombian captain compared high-altitude pump performance with Midwestern flat-terrain calculations, drawing interest from rural chiefs navigating limited hydrant flow.
Recognition ceremonies celebrated individual impact. The Tom Brennan Lifetime Achievement Award went to Robert Morris Sr, chief of Stamford Fire Department and senior instructor at the Connecticut Fire Academy, honouring a five-decade career that has shaped training doctrine across the region.
Thursday’s programme named Frank Viscuso Instructor of the Year for his work on leadership development, while summit sessions on industrial hazards and tall-building operations provided deeper dives for officers tackling specialised risks.
As exhibitors dismantled rigs and instructors archived slide decks, organisers confirmed that FDIC International will return to Indianapolis from 20 to 25 April 2026. FDIC International 2025
Planning committees previewed an electric-vehicle fire laboratory, expanded artificial intelligence governance workshops and a refreshed officer-development pathway for next year. Those directions mirror questions that surfaced repeatedly in 2025: how to merge data analytics with street-level tactics, how to integrate low-carbon equipment without compromising fire flow and how to safeguard responder health across decades of service.
The week showed that practical skills and strategic insight can share the same stage. Live-fire evolutions honed muscle memory, while classroom forums challenged assumptions with fresh research. New apparatus displayed innovative drivetrains, yet instructors reminded visitors that pressure readings and nozzle discipline still dictate effective water application.
Most importantly, the event reinforced a simple principle: the fire service advances through shared experience. Whether rescuing a shelter dog, dissecting battery-pack ignition paths or listening to a veteran describe a mayday, attendees left Indianapolis with stories and data they can turn into safer streets at home.
The fireground may change with every response, but the willingness to gather, test ideas and debate evidence endures. FDIC International 2025 captured that spirit in every aisle and every hose line, setting the tone for the year ahead.