Are You in a Flood Zone? The Answers Might Surprise you!
Flooding is one of the most catastrophic events a home can endure. Just a single inch of flooding inside your house can result in more than $25,000 in damage. Since your homeowner’s insurance policy more than likely excludes the peril of flood, the only way to protect yourself is to purchase flood insurance.
Many homeowners are told their house is “not in a flood zone,” most likely by their mortgage lender. Happy to hear the good news, homeowners will then go on and make the decision not to purchase flood insurance. Unfortunately, “not in a flood zone” does not mean your home isn’t immune to flooding. Worse yet, there is a very good chance your home actually IS in a flood zone.
How can this be?
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has 14 flood zone designations. Each zone falls into one of two categories:
- Moderate to low-risk areas –B, C, D, and X zones
- High-risk special flood hazard areas – A and V zones (and their variations)
When banks, mortgage lenders, and even the local news speak about flood zones, they are referring to A and V zones. Lenders require homes located in an A or V zone to purchase flood insurance as the risk of flooding in these zones 26% over the course of a 30-year mortgage.
If you are told you are “not in a flood zone,” this means you are likely in a B, C, D, or X zone (or in a rare unmapped location). Homes in these zones may only be subject to a 100 to 500-year flooding event. But here’s the rub…
More than 20% of all flood claims come from moderate to low hazard areas!
These are the same areas that have been misidentified as “not in a flood zone” by individuals who are looking only to protect their assets – not yours. To further complicate matters, your home’s risk of flooding changes over time. As we continue development, floodplains and water run-off can shift.
Flood maps are only updated every 8 to 10 years. Today you may indeed be in a low-risk flood zone. After a few short years of shopping malls, new neighborhoods, and urban sprawl, you home can quickly find itself in a high hazard area before FEMA has the chance to declare your area an A or V zone. Flood insurance for homes in a moderate to low flood hazard area is very affordable. Often costing only a few hundred dollars a year. The question is not IF you are in a flood zone, but WHICH flood zone. Once you learn the facts about the risks to your home, only then should you make the decision whether or not to purchase flood insurance – not because someone said you are “not in a flood zone.”
Featured Blogs
- Aging and Our Body’s Ability to Heal Itself
- What is Credit Health Insurance?
- Keeping Health Insurance After a Layoff
- Waking Up to the Impact of Insomnia
- How Life Insurance Benefits Women
- Electric Car: To Buy or to Lease?
- What experts say about raising the retirement age
- Coverage for healthcare treatment denied? Here’s what you can do.
- How are the proceeds of a life settlement taxed?
- Sharing the Road with Cyclists
- Buying Life Insurance for an Elderly Parent?
- What Every Renter Needs to Know about Renters Insurance
- Medicaid Unwinding: Your Questions Answered
- Does Uber Insurance Cover Passengers?
- Living Your Best Life After 60
- Weird Things Covered by Home Insurance
- Buying Health Insurance: A Millennial’s Guide
- Self-Love Ideas for Valentine’s Day
- Life Without Clutter
- Set Yourself Up for Success with Your Fitness Routine
- When to Upgrade Your Auto Insurance
- Winter Hydration – Do I Need It?
- What Does My Home Insurance Policy Cover?
- I’m 60+; Do I Need Life Insurance?
- Why Do I Keep Breaking My New Year’s Resolutions?
- Closing Out the Year with a Smile!
- How to Enjoy a Long Layover
- Are You Paying Too Much for Auto Insurance?
- 6 Cold Weather Safety Tips
- 10 Tips for Managing Cholesterol Levels
- How Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustments Affect Your Taxes
- How Much Life Insurance Do You Need Right Now?
- LA County COVID Vaccine Info
- The Case(s) to Buy Life Insurance for Your Child
- SimpliSafe vs. Ring, Which is Right for You?
- What Medical Bills are Tax Deductible for 2019?
- Are You in a Flood Zone? The Answers Might Surprise you!
- The Safest Vehicles to Buy in Model Year 2020
- Freezing Pipes Burst! Am I Covered?
- This is Why You Pay Taxes on Employer-Sponsored Disability Insurance