Firefighter taken to hospital after Seabrook house fire
A firefighter was hospitalized after flames broke out in a Seabrook multi-family home, displacing three adults but leaving no residents reported hurt.
Firefighters rushed to a Seabrook home on Good Luck Road after flames were reported showing from the terrace level of a three-story multi-family dwelling, and one firefighter later went to the hospital for evaluation. The fire, called in around 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the 9700 block of Good Luck Road, forced three adults out of the home.
Crews arrived to find fire visible from the terrace level, a part of the structure that can be difficult to access quickly and can allow a blaze to spread before it is fully contained. No resident injuries were reported in the initial account, suggesting the response may have limited the harm even as the fire disrupted housing for the adults inside.
Prince George’s County Fire and Emergency Medical Services said the department transported the firefighter to the hospital to be checked out. The agency, which handles fire suppression and emergency medical services across the county, says it responds to more than 135,000 calls for service in a typical year, a reminder of how often crews are pulled into urgent and physically demanding scenes like this one.
The cause of the Seabrook fire was not identified in the initial report. County residents seeking incident-number information, status updates or related questions can contact pgfdreports@co.pg.md.us, while fire investigation questions are handled by the Prince George’s County Office of the Fire Marshal.

The fire adds to a recent string of residential blazes in Seabrook. On March 28, another house fire in the community displaced two adults, four children and eight dogs, and in April 2025 crews also battled a multi-family fire in the 9900 block of Greenbelt Road. In a corridor like Good Luck Road, where multi-family housing can place several households under one roofline, even a fire that starts in one section can quickly become a broader public-safety problem.
Prince George’s County Fire and Emergency Medical Services is led by Chief Tiffany Green. Thursday’s response underscores how quickly a routine call can turn into a hospital evaluation, a temporary displacement and a larger threat to a neighborhood home.
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