How To Find Your Property On FEMA’s Flood Insurance Rate Maps

What are FEMA flood maps?

FEMA’s Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) or just Flood Maps are provided after a flood risk assessment has been completed or updated for a community.  This study is known as a Flood Insurance Study.  The FIRM gives you the Base Flood Elevations (BFEs) and insurance risk zones in addition to floodplain boundaries.  The FIRM may also show a delineation of the regulatory floodway.

Once the “insurance risk zone”  (commonly referred to as the flood zone) is determined, actuarial rates, based on these risk zones, are then applied for newly constructed, substantially approved, and substantially damaged buildings.  FEMA uses these rates to determine the insurance rate you will pay for flood insurance

FEMA’s Digital Flood Maps

FEMA discontinued the production and distribution of paper flood maps in 2009 as part of its Digital Vision Initiative. This affected all the Flood Maps, boundary information, and study reports. However, clients can still view the products for free through their website or buy them in digital format.

To view these flood maps online, go to FEMA’s Map Service Center and key in your address (hi-lited area shown here) search for your home.  This will prompt you to then select the map that covers your area.  The Flood Maps are somewhat cumbersome to use online. It is best to go through the tutorial on the bottom right of the address search page for an easier and more effective use of the GIS map.

author avatar
Surveyor

More Posts

Title deed and property map reviewed as part of an ALTA Land Title Survey during a real estate transaction
alta survey
Surveyor

Why the ALTA Land Title Survey Is Still the Gold Standard

Digital maps are everywhere. With a few taps, you can see property lines, roads, and buildings from your phone. Because of that, many buyers assume those maps are accurate enough to trust. However, when real money, ownership, and legal responsibility are involved, “close enough” can become a serious problem. That’s

Read More »
Land surveyor marking boundary lines on a residential property during a property line survey
boundary surveying
Surveyor

Property Line Survey: Documents You’ll Want Ready First

If you are planning a fence, an addition, a home sale, or a property purchase, there is a good chance you will need a property line survey. Most homeowners expect the process to start when the survey crew arrives on-site. In reality, the work begins much earlier—with documents. In Maine,

Read More »
Spray paint layout marks on sandy ground showing where a construction staking survey guides a coastal rebuild before pouring concrete
land surveying
Surveyor

Construction Staking Survey: Stake It Before You Pour

If you watched the huge surf video that WMTW shared from Short Sands Beach in York, Maine, you probably felt that mix of awe and worry. Waves crashed close to homes. Then real life kicked in. After a storm clip goes viral, people don’t just share it. They start fixing

Read More »
Drone performing a UAV survey above a dense forest landscape
land surveying
Surveyor

How GPS-Free UAV Survey Tech Transforms Forest Mapping

Most people think drones can map any piece of land if the pilot knows what they’re doing. But that isn’t true in many wooded or remote places. Thick trees, steep slopes, and narrow valleys often block satellite signals, which makes GPS weak or unreliable. When GPS fails, drone mapping falls

Read More »
High-resolution aerial map showing detailed terrain and urban layouts, similar to the data used in modern LiDAR mapping
land surveying
Surveyor

Why LiDAR Mapping Demand Is Rising Worldwide

Governments around the world want better land data, and they want it fast. One of the biggest moves came from Tamil Nadu, India, where officials pushed for 30-centimeter satellite imagery to upgrade their land records. This news spread quickly because it shows a major shift in how countries handle mapping

Read More »
A land surveyor using professional equipment to map an open field during a property survey
boundary surveying
Surveyor

How a Big Merger Could Change Property Survey Services

If you plan to buy land, build a home, or settle a boundary question, you will likely need a property survey sometime soon. In most years, this process feels simple. You call a local surveyor, get on their schedule, and wait for the crew to mark your lines. But late

Read More »