Houston is the most flood-damaged major city in America. Tropical Storm Allison (2001), Tax Day Flood (2016), Memorial Day Flood (2015), and Hurricane Harvey (2017) — each event exposed the gap between what Houston homeowners thought their insurance covered and what it actually did. This guide explains your flood insurance options, what Harvey taught us, and why the right policy before the next storm is the single most important financial decision you can make as a Houston homeowner.
Standard homeowners insurance explicitly excludes flood damage. “Flood” in insurance terms means water that enters your home from the outside — rising bayous, sheet flow from heavy rain, storm surge. In Houston, where some neighborhoods flood multiple times per decade, this exclusion is catastrophic if you’re uninsured.
After Harvey, approximately 80% of flooded Harris County homes did not have flood insurance. Homeowners who had paid off their mortgages (and therefore weren’t required to carry flood insurance) and those outside FEMA high-risk zones faced losses with no coverage.
The NFIP is a federal program managed by FEMA that provides flood insurance to properties in participating communities. Houston and all Harris County municipalities participate. NFIP policies are sold through private insurance agents but backed by the federal government.
30 days — you cannot buy NFIP coverage and have it activate immediately. The 30-day waiting period means you must buy before storm season, not when a storm is named.
NFIP introduced Risk Rating 2.0 in 2021, transitioning from flood zone-based pricing to property-specific risk assessment. For many Houston homeowners — particularly in older neighborhoods — this has meant significant rate increases. Annual premiums now range from $800 to over $4,000+ depending on your property’s specific flood risk factors, elevation, foundation type, and distance to water.
Since 2014, the private flood insurance market has grown substantially in Texas. Private carriers can offer broader coverage, higher limits, and sometimes lower premiums than NFIP — especially for properties that have been re-mapped to lower risk zones.
FEMA flood zone designations determine whether you’re required to have flood insurance and heavily influence your premium:
Check your zone: FEMA Flood Map Service Center at msc.fema.gov. Enter your address to see your exact flood zone designation and when the map was last updated.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ decision to release Addicks and Barker Reservoirs during Harvey deliberately flooded thousands of homes in Zone X — areas previously considered low-risk. Entire subdivisions in Energy Corridor, Bear Creek, and Cinco Ranch that had never flooded received 3-6 feet of water inside structures.
This created a landmark legal case: In re Downstream Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs. The federal government was found liable for a Fifth Amendment taking — essentially acknowledging that the government deliberately flooded private property. Many homeowners who lacked flood insurance received zero compensation for years while litigation proceeded.
The lesson: In Houston, flood risk is not fully captured by FEMA maps. Government infrastructure decisions, development that alters drainage, and the increasing intensity of Gulf storms mean that every Houston homeowner should consider flood insurance regardless of zone designation.
Flood insurance is required by federal law if your home is in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA, or “high-risk zone”) and you have a federally backed mortgage. In Houston, this includes many areas near Brays Bayou, Buffalo Bayou, White Oak Bayou, and other waterways. Even outside mandatory zones, flood insurance is strongly recommended — about 25% of flood claims nationally come from low-to-moderate risk areas.
NFIP does not cover: Additional living expenses (you must pay for a hotel out of pocket), financial loss due to business interruption, most basement contents and improvements, outdoor property (landscaping, fences, pools), vehicles, precious metals, or stock certificates. NFIP also has a $250,000 structural limit and $100,000 contents limit — inadequate for many Houston homes.
NFIP policies have a 30-day waiting period before coverage begins. Private flood insurance waiting periods vary by carrier — some offer 10-14 day waiting periods. Neither applies if you’re purchasing at the time of a new mortgage. You cannot buy flood insurance once a storm is named or imminent — so buy before hurricane season begins.
Houston’s highest flood-risk neighborhoods include: Meyerland (Brays Bayou), Kingwood (Lake Houston/San Jacinto), Greens Bayou corridor, Addicks/Barker reservoir zones in west Houston (Cinco Ranch, Bear Creek, Memorial area), Kashmere Gardens, and Lawndale/Wayside. Use FEMA’s Flood Map Service Center at msc.fema.gov to check your specific property’s flood zone designation.
Already experienced flood damage? 247 Restoration Specialists provides 24/7 emergency response throughout Houston and Harris County. We help document your damage for insurance claims and provide IICRC-certified water damage restoration. Call (281) 262-9500.