Repeatedly Flooded Properties Cost Billions

New policies are needed to break a cycle of loss and rebuilding

Overview

Flooding is the most costly and most common natural disaster in the United States.1 The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) provides federally backed coverage for homeowners and small businesses in more than 22,000 communities across the country.2

Among the NFIP’s policyholders are thousands whose properties have flooded multiple times. Called “repetitive loss properties,” these are buildings and/or contents for which the NFIP has paid at least two claims of more than $1,000 in any 10-year period since 1978. “Severe repetitive loss properties” are those for which the program has either made at least four payments for buildings and/or contents of more than $5,000 or at least two building-only payments that exceeded the value of the property. For example: Flood damage at a 300-unit Roanoke Valley, Virginia, apartment complex cost the program more than $10.5 million over nine years, and a $69,000 Mississippi home flooded 34 times in 32 years, resulting in $663,000 in claims. These extreme cases make up a small fraction of the nearly 5 million active policies nationwide but represent a disproportionately large share of claims.3 Also, these policyholders face no limits on the number of claims they can submit or on a value of payments they may receive.

The Pew Charitable Trusts supports proactive policy solutions that will break the cycle of repeated flooding and rebuilding in order to better prepare people and property for natural disasters, improve public safety, and put the NFIP on stronger financial footing by reducing the program’s $23 billion debt.4

A Fraction of Properties Account for More Than a Quarter of the NFIP’s Claims
Every state has frequently flooded properties, but 21 have a 1,000 or more.

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Endnotes

  1. Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Federal Flood Risk Management Standard,” last updated March 29, 2016, http://www.fema.gov/news-release/2015/02/05/federal-flood-risk-management-standard.
  2. Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Protecting Homes,” last updated June 24, 2016, http://www.fema.gov/protecting-homes.
  3. Federal Emergency Management Agency, National Flood Insurance Program Flood Insurance Manual (April 2016), http://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/115549.
  4. U.S. Government Accountability Office, High-Risk Series: An Update (February 2015), http://www.gao.gov/assets/670/668415.pdf.
Podcast

The Financial Toll of Flooding—Part 1

Episode 8

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Podcast

It’s hurricane season—and extreme weather events are on the rise. Along with the catastrophic losses that families face after the flood is the economic burden on taxpayers through the National Flood Insurance Program. It’s the financial lifeline for those who carry flood insurance and an essential funding source for both disaster preparation and recovery efforts. However, the program is also $25 billion in debt, and more than a quarter of that total is from properties that flood repeatedly. It’s a growing issue affecting more than just coastal cities.