Madison County Fire & EMS Frequencies
This page lists the fire-service and EMS radio frequencies on file for Madison County, Illinois, with the county seat at Edwardsville and a local ZIP prefix that begins with 620xx. Whether you are a resident programming a new handheld scanner, a journalist chasing a working fire, a neighboring department monitoring mutual-aid traffic, or a ham operator on AUXCOMM duty, this is your starting point for the channels you actually need.
Dispatch traffic in the county moves on a small set of repeated channels: a primary fire dispatch repeater that carries the initial alarm, a fireground tactical channel that the assignment moves to once units arrive on scene, an EMS dispatch channel for ambulance assignments, and an EMS-to-hospital med channel where medics give entry notifications and consult medical control. Larger incidents — a working fire requiring mutual aid, a multi-vehicle highway crash with extrication, a wildland fire spreading into neighboring jurisdictions — escalate to the statewide channels documented on the Illinois page.
Madison County is a predominantly rural jurisdiction, and that shows up clearly in the radio. Long quiet stretches are punctuated by lengthy assignments — wildland brush fires, agricultural-equipment fires, single-vehicle rural extrications, and long EMS transports to the nearest hospital — where the fireground channel can stay in continuous use for hours rather than minutes. Volunteer departments anchor most of the response model here, with paid EMS handling the medical side; tones-out paging on VHF is still common, and you'll hear long pages with full address read-outs because units may be a substantial drive from the call.
Repeater coverage in Madison County is hill-and-valley dependent, so departments around Edwardsville occasionally call for a relay through a neighboring department's repeater, especially in low areas. The escalation path for working incidents goes to MABAS Red for resource requests within Illinois, and the nationwide NIFOG VFIRE and 8TAC channels are the canonical fall-backs for cross-state mutual aid during major wildland incidents.
The local agencies and the channels they typically run are listed below. From each agency page you can pull a deeper view of that department's individual fireground, tac, and EMS-side channels — useful when you want to monitor only one department rather than the whole county.
Local agencies in Madison County
Dispatch & tactical channels
| Channel | Frequency | Agency | Type | Tone | Mode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fire Dispatch | 154.3550 MHz | Madison County Fire & Rescue | Fire | 156.7 | Analog FM |
| Fire Tactical | 460.5250 MHz | Madison County Fire & Rescue | Fire | 156.7 | Analog FM |
| EMS Dispatch | 856.4875 MHz | Madison County EMS | EMS | NAC 293 | P25 Phase 1 |
| EMS Tactical | 154.4300 MHz | Madison County EMS | EMS | 156.7 | Analog FM |
Frequencies shown are representative dispatch and tactical channels selected from common US public-safety channel plans for Madison County. Always verify the exact in-use channel with the agency or a current RadioReference database entry before relying on it operationally.
Illinois mutual-aid escalation channels
When an incident in Madison County exceeds local capability, the assignment typically moves to one of these statewide working channels.
| Channel | Frequency | Type | Tone / NAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| MABAS Red | 154.2650 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
Nationwide NIFOG channels active here
| Channel | Frequency | Type | Tone / NAC |
|---|---|---|---|
| VFIRE21 | 154.2800 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VFIRE22 | 154.2650 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VFIRE23 | 154.2950 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VFIRE24 | 154.2725 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VFIRE25 | 154.2875 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VFIRE26 | 154.3025 MHz | Fire | 156.7 |
| VMED28 | 155.3400 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
| VMED29 | 155.3475 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
| VMED30 | 155.2050 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
| VMED31 | 155.2200 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
| VMED32 | 155.2350 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
| VMED33 | 155.3175 MHz | EMS | 156.7 |
Adjacent counties in Illinois
Mutual aid flows between neighboring counties first. Cross-program these for working alarms near the county line.