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.

More Posts

Surveyor using a total station during an ALTA Land Title Survey at an active construction site to ensure accuracy and safety
alta survey
Surveyor

ALTA Survey Lessons From a Scaffold Collapse

When a scaffold suddenly collapsed at a busy job site in San Antonio last week, it made national headlines. Roads were blocked, emergency teams rushed in, and engineers spent hours figuring out what went wrong. It wasn’t just a story about construction—it was a reminder of how fragile a project

Read More »
Surveyors using total station equipment beside traffic cones on a closed roadway for an alta land title survey
alta survey
Surveyor

How Freeway Closures Affect Your ALTA Land Title Survey

When the I-5 freeway near Camp Pendleton suddenly closed after a live-fire training accident, drivers across San Diego were stuck in long traffic jams. But while everyone waited, survey teams were already preparing to check the land, slopes, and property lines around the area. It’s a good reminder that the

Read More »
Flooded suburban neighborhood with a high water warning sign illustrating why accurate data from a loan closing survey is vital during the NFIP freeze
boundary surveying
Surveyor

NFIP Freeze: How a Loan Closing Survey Keeps Deals Alive

When the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) froze on September 30, home deals across the U.S. hit a wall. Here in San Diego, the pause has caused real stress for buyers trying to close on homes in flood-risk zones like Mission Valley, Mission Beach, and parts of Santee. Without flood

Read More »
Coastal bluff with luxury homes near the edge, showing why a boundary line survey is essential for protecting coastal properties.
boundary surveying
Surveyor

Why a Boundary Line Survey Matters for Coastal Homes

When the Rancho Palos Verdes bluff collapsed in late September, news cameras showed luxury homes sliding toward the ocean. It was shocking, but for homeowners in San Diego, it felt uncomfortably close to home. Our coastline has the same steep cliffs, the same erosion issues, and the same risk. If

Read More »
Drone surveying over a forest with smoke rising from wildfire debris
land surveying
Surveyor

Drone Surveying Lessons from a Firefighting Collision

When most people hear about drone surveying, they picture builders saving time or developers mapping large tracts of land. What rarely comes to mind is the risk drones can pose when flown in the wrong place at the wrong time. That reality hit hard in California this month. News broke

Read More »
Cracked and uneven concrete pavement caused by land subsidence, highlighting the importance of land surveying to detect and manage ground sinking.
land surveying
Surveyor

How Land Surveying Helps Combat Land Subsidence Risks

If you live in San Diego, you might not realize that the ground beneath your feet is slowly sinking. This problem, called land subsidence, is happening faster here than in most other California cities. It’s caused mainly by pumping out too much groundwater for drinking and farming. While the sinking

Read More »