Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The property is in an AO zone with a 6 foot base flood elevation. Looks like they elevated 2 feet above the BFE which is code. The flood insurance would be based on the flood zone, BFE and elevation of the property. Since they are 2 feet above the BFE, the flood insurance would not be substantial. That being said, the risk is still there and flood insurance only covers 250/100k (or about) and it would cost significantly more to replace that house and redo the interior when it floods...and it will.
Read Risk 2.0 rate guidance. Literally elevation above BFE is just one factor. How they calculate rates is no longer just zone and elevation above BFE.
+1 This is truth. For the NFIP, zones are no longer used to rate, but your lender will still use them to determine if you will have to have flood insurance to get a loan.
Anonymous wrote:Why would anyone want this house for $2.5 million? Not on the beach, old and unrenovated, on a dingy looking canal, with highway noise and potential flooding issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The property is in an AO zone with a 6 foot base flood elevation. Looks like they elevated 2 feet above the BFE which is code. The flood insurance would be based on the flood zone, BFE and elevation of the property. Since they are 2 feet above the BFE, the flood insurance would not be substantial. That being said, the risk is still there and flood insurance only covers 250/100k (or about) and it would cost significantly more to replace that house and redo the interior when it floods...and it will.
Read Risk 2.0 rate guidance. Literally elevation above BFE is just one factor. How they calculate rates is no longer just zone and elevation above BFE.
Why would anyone want this house for $2.5 million?
Anonymous wrote:The property is in an AO zone with a 6 foot base flood elevation. Looks like they elevated 2 feet above the BFE which is code. The flood insurance would be based on the flood zone, BFE and elevation of the property. Since they are 2 feet above the BFE, the flood insurance would not be substantial. That being said, the risk is still there and flood insurance only covers 250/100k (or about) and it would cost significantly more to replace that house and redo the interior when it floods...and it will.
A copy of current flood insurance policy and working with a good flood agent is best way to know current cost and possible future cost
Anonymous wrote:The property is in an AO zone with a 6 foot base flood elevation. Looks like they elevated 2 feet above the BFE which is code. The flood insurance would be based on the flood zone, BFE and elevation of the property. Since they are 2 feet above the BFE, the flood insurance would not be substantial. That being said, the risk is still there and flood insurance only covers 250/100k (or about) and it would cost significantly more to replace that house and redo the interior when it floods...and it will.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not built very high off the ground so I think you’re right that flood insurance would be high. Flood insurance is based on that, not only on proximity to the water. I’m on the water but because my house is elevated, my flood insurance isn’t bad.
Anonymous wrote:2000