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

Land surveyor documenting a completed residential property with finished driveway, landscaping, and site improvements after construction
land surveying
Surveyor

What Is an As-Built Survey? A Simple Guide for Property Owners 

Construction projects do not always end when the last nail is in place. An as-built survey helps property owners confirm what was actually built after construction is complete. Whether you added a home addition, pool, driveway, dock, or commercial site feature, this survey creates a record of finished conditions on

Read More »
Aerial view of a narrow residential lot showing boundaries, setbacks, and buildable space from a property line survey
boundary surveying
Surveyor

How a Property Line Survey Shows What You Can Build 

Tampa keeps growing, and a lot of that growth happens on smaller, tighter lots. You’ll see new homes squeezed between older ones. You’ll see empty parcels split into two or even three pieces. On paper, it looks simple. You buy a lot, then build what you want. It doesn’t work

Read More »
Team reviewing site plans together on a construction site before submission
land surveying
Surveyor

What a Land Survey Company Checks Before Site Plans

Submitting a site plan sounds simple at first. You draw the layout, send it in, and wait for approval. Then the comments come back. Something does not match. A detail is missing. A revision is required. This happens more than people expect. In many cases, the issue is not the

Read More »
Water pooling in a flat backyard near a house after rain, showing poor drainage and uneven ground
land surveying
Surveyor

How LiDAR Mapping Finds Hidden Drainage Problems

Buying land in Tampa feels simple at first. The lot looks flat. The ground seems dry. It feels ready to build on. Then the rain comes. Water starts to sit in the yard. It slowly moves toward the house. It stays longer than you expected. By then, plans are already

Read More »
Homeowner reviewing documents to see if an elevation certificate already exists for the property
flood damage
Surveyor

Find an Existing Elevation Certificate Before You Pay

You’re buying a home, updating insurance, or trying to get a permit approved. Then someone asks for an elevation certificate. Most people react the same way. They assume they need to order a new one right away. That’s where things go wrong. In Tampa, many properties already have an elevation

Read More »
Commercial property surveyor checking land conditions before development
land surveyor
Surveyor

Why You Need a Commercial Property Surveyor Today

A commercial property in Tampa can look like a great deal at first. The numbers make sense. The size looks right. The location feels strong. Then things start to shift once the site gets a closer look. That happens more often now. Florida is putting more focus on how land

Read More »