Houston floods. If you've lived here for any amount of time, you already know this. Hurricane Harvey in 2017 dropped over 60 inches of rain in some areas and flooded more than 150,000 homes across the metro. Tax Day floods in 2016 and Memorial Day floods in 2015 caused billions in damage. Tropical Storm Imelda in 2019 hit the east side hard.
After 20+ years as a mortgage broker in Houston, I've helped buyers work through flood risk on hundreds of transactions. My approach is straightforward: know the risk, understand the cost, and make a smart decision. Buying in a flood zone isn't automatically a bad idea. But buying without understanding the flood risk is.
This guide shows you exactly how to check flood risk, what flood insurance costs, which areas to watch, and how it all affects your mortgage payment.
FEMA designates flood zones based on the probability of flooding in a given area. Here are the zones you'll encounter in Houston.
| Zone | Risk Level | What It Means | Flood Insurance Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone A / AE | High Risk | 1% annual chance of flooding ("100 year floodplain") | Yes (if federally backed mortgage) |
| Zone AO | High Risk | Shallow flooding areas, 1 to 3 feet | Yes |
| Zone VE | High Risk (Coastal) | Coastal flood zone with wave action | Yes |
| Zone X (shaded) | Moderate Risk | 0.2% annual chance ("500 year floodplain") | No (but recommended) |
| Zone X (unshaded) | Minimal Risk | Outside both 100 year and 500 year floodplains | No (but recommended) |
Important: "100 year floodplain" does not mean it floods once every 100 years. It means there is a 1% chance of flooding in any given year. Over a 30 year mortgage, a home in the 100 year floodplain has a 26% chance of flooding at least once. That's higher than most people realize.
FEMA flood maps are a starting point, not the final answer. Here's why:
This is why I recommend checking multiple sources, not just the FEMA map.
Before you make an offer on any Houston property, run through this checklist.
Go to msc.fema.gov and enter the property address. This shows you the official FEMA flood zone designation. If the home is in Zone A, AE, or VE, flood insurance will be required by your lender.
The Harris County Flood Control District (HCFCD) maintains a flood education mapping tool at harriscountyfemt.org. This tool shows:
This is the single most useful tool for Houston flood research. If you're buying in Harris County, always check this site.
The City of Houston and Harris County both published Harvey flood extent maps. If a home flooded during Harvey, that's critical information. You can also ask the seller directly. Texas law requires sellers to disclose known flooding history on the Seller's Disclosure Notice.
An elevation certificate tells you the home's elevation relative to the Base Flood Elevation (BFE) for its area. Homes built above the BFE have lower flood risk and lower flood insurance premiums. Many newer Houston homes are built 1 to 3 feet above BFE. Older homes often sit at or below BFE.
This is old school but effective. After a heavy rainstorm, drive through the neighborhood and look for standing water in streets, yards, and drainage ditches. If water doesn't drain within a few hours, that's a sign of poor drainage infrastructure.
I check flood zones for every property my buyers are considering. It takes five minutes and can save you from a six figure mistake. If you're looking at homes in Houston, book a free consultation and I'll walk you through the flood risk for any address.
Flood insurance is separate from your regular homeowners insurance. Your standard homeowners policy does NOT cover flood damage. Here's what flood insurance typically costs in the Houston area.
| Flood Zone | Annual Premium (typical range) | Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zone AE (high risk) | $1,800 to $5,000+ | $150 to $417+ | Varies significantly by elevation, flood history, and building characteristics |
| Zone A (high risk) | $2,000 to $6,000+ | $167 to $500+ | Higher premiums due to less detailed flood data |
| Zone X shaded (moderate) | $400 to $1,200 | $33 to $100 | Not required but strongly recommended |
| Zone X unshaded (minimal) | $300 to $800 | $25 to $67 | Lowest cost. Preferred Risk Policy may apply |
FEMA implemented Risk Rating 2.0 in 2021, changing how flood insurance premiums are calculated. Instead of basing rates primarily on flood zone, the new system considers:
Under Risk Rating 2.0, some Houston homeowners saw premiums decrease while others saw significant increases. The key factor is the home's specific characteristics and location relative to flood sources.
The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) through FEMA is not your only option. Private flood insurance companies now compete in the Houston market and can sometimes offer lower premiums with higher coverage limits. I recommend getting quotes from both NFIP and private carriers to compare.
Flood risk impacts your mortgage in several direct ways.
If the home is in a FEMA designated Special Flood Hazard Area (Zone A, AE, V, or VE) and you have a federally backed mortgage (FHA, VA, USDA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac), flood insurance is required. Your lender will verify the flood zone as part of the loan process.
Flood insurance premiums are collected through your escrow account, just like property taxes and homeowners insurance. Here's a real example of how flood insurance changes the monthly picture.
| Scenario | No Flood Insurance | Zone X ($600/yr) | Zone AE ($2,400/yr) | Zone AE ($4,800/yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Home Price | $350,000 | $350,000 | $350,000 | $350,000 |
| P&I (6.5%, 5% down) | $2,103 | $2,103 | $2,103 | $2,103 |
| Property Tax (2.5%) | $729 | $729 | $729 | $729 |
| Homeowners Insurance | $230 | $230 | $230 | $230 |
| PMI | $133 | $133 | $133 | $133 |
| Flood Insurance | $0 | $50 | $200 | $400 |
| Total Monthly | $3,195 | $3,245 | $3,395 | $3,595 |
A $4,800 annual flood insurance premium adds $400 per month. That's the equivalent of adding $65,000 to the home price in terms of monthly cost. Flood insurance is a real expense that must be factored into your budget.
Our mortgage analyzer lets you add flood insurance to your payment estimate so you can see the true monthly cost before making an offer.
Because flood insurance increases your monthly housing costs, it reduces how much home you can qualify for. If you're shopping in a flood zone area, your maximum purchase price may be $30,000 to $70,000 lower than in a non flood zone area, depending on the insurance premium.
This is another reason I calculate real buying power based on your target neighborhoods, not just a generic number.
Some Houston areas have higher flood risk based on their proximity to bayous, historical flooding patterns, and drainage infrastructure. This is not an exhaustive list, but these areas require extra due diligence.
Every property is different. Even in "safe" areas, individual lots can have drainage issues. And in "risky" areas, many individual homes performed well during Harvey. Always check the specific address, not just the neighborhood reputation.
A flood zone designation doesn't have to be a deal breaker. Here's how to evaluate the situation.
I don't tell buyers to avoid flood zones entirely. Some of the best values in Houston are in areas with flood zone designations. The key is understanding exactly what you're dealing with and pricing the risk correctly.
What I do tell every buyer: flood risk is real in Houston. It's not theoretical. Harvey proved that definitively. The smart approach is to check the data, get real insurance quotes, and make a financially informed decision.
I check flood zones and estimate flood insurance costs for every property my buyers consider. It's part of the standard payment analysis I do because it directly affects your monthly budget and your total housing cost.
Book a free consultation or call me at 713-548-7350. I'll help you evaluate flood risk and build a complete monthly payment for any Houston property. For a full look at what you will pay at closing, including prepaid flood insurance, check out our Houston Closing Costs Explained guide.
Ben Helstein, InSync Homes & Loans
About the Author: Ben Helstein is a dual licensed real estate broker and mortgage loan originator at InSync Homes & Loans in Houston, TX (NMLS #1577314, Company NMLS #1829321). He helps Houston buyers, sellers, and investors navigate real estate and financing under one roof. Learn more at https://insync.homes.