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Every year, thousands of homeowners file claims after a flood — only to be told their policy doesn't cover it. It feels like a scam. It's actually an economics problem, and once you understand it, the exclusion makes complete sense.
Insurance works by pooling risk across a large group. Most policyholders pay in, a small number file claims, and the math works out. The key assumption is that bad events are random and independent — your house fire doesn't cause your neighbor's house to burn down too.
Floods violate this assumption completely. When a flood hits, it doesn't damage one house — it damages entire neighborhoods, entire cities, entire regions simultaneously. In 2017, Hurricane Harvey caused $125 billion in damage across the Houston area. In a single event. No private insurer could absorb that across millions of policies because they'd all pay out at once.
This is called correlated risk, and it breaks the math that makes insurance possible. Private insurers tried to cover floods for decades and kept going bankrupt or exiting the market. By the 1960s, private flood insurance had essentially disappeared in the United States.
In 1968, the federal government created the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), administered by FEMA. The government can absorb correlated risk that would destroy private insurers because it can borrow money, raise taxes, and spread losses across all taxpayers over time.
Most residential flood insurance in the US is issued through the NFIP. You buy it through a regular insurance agent, but the policy is backed by the federal government. A separate private flood insurance market has slowly developed in recent years, offering better coverage in some cases — but NFIP is still the dominant option.
Not all water damage is treated the same. Here's how standard policies handle it:
| Water Source | Standard Policy? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Burst pipe | ✅ Usually covered | Sudden/accidental — considered a covered peril |
| Roof leak from rain | ✅ Usually covered | Rain damage from storm typically covered |
| Flooding from a storm | ❌ Not covered | Requires separate flood policy |
| Storm surge from hurricane | ❌ Not covered | Classified as flooding, not wind |
| Sewer backup | ❌ Usually not covered | Optional rider available with many policies |
| Gradual water damage/mold | ❌ Not covered | Considered maintenance issue |
| Flood from nearby river/lake | ❌ Not covered | Requires NFIP or private flood insurance |
The legal definition of flooding in insurance is important: water that comes from outside your home due to an overflowing body of water, storm surge, or surface water runoff is considered a flood. Water that enters through a failed pipe or roof is not a flood.
NFIP flood insurance averages around $700–$900 per year nationally, but it varies widely based on your flood zone, elevation, home value, and coverage limits.
NFIP policies max out at $250,000 for the structure and $100,000 for contents. If your home is worth more, you'd need excess flood insurance from a private carrier to cover the gap.
Maybe. FEMA data shows that roughly 25% of flood insurance claims come from outside high-risk flood zones. Flood maps are also famously out of date — many were drawn decades ago and don't reflect current development, drainage patterns, or climate trends.
If you're in a low-risk zone, flood insurance is cheap (often under $500/year) and provides meaningful protection against an increasingly common risk. It's worth considering even if you're not required to buy it.
If you have a federally-backed mortgage and live in a high-risk flood zone, flood insurance isn't optional — your lender requires it.
Same story. Earthquakes are also excluded from standard home policies for the same reason — correlated risk. An earthquake damages an entire region simultaneously. Earthquake insurance is sold separately, primarily through the California Earthquake Authority (CEA) in California and private insurers elsewhere. Premiums are high and deductibles are steep (often 10–25% of your home's value).
Upload your homeowners policy to PolicyZen. Ask "does my policy cover flooding?" and get an answer based on your actual documents — not a generic guess.
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