Asbury Park Press

NJ property owners required to disclose flooding risks

Rising sea levels, more heavy rain behind change

- Olivia Liu

Looking to buy or rent in New Jersey? Beginning on March 20, 2024, sellers and landlords will be required to fill out new disclosure­s addressing the property’s potential flooding risks. Buyers and renters can also do their own research with an interactiv­e website by the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection.

The new section of the seller disclosure form states: “Flood risks in New Jersey are growing due to the effects of climate change. Coastal and inland areas may experience significan­t flooding now and in the near future, including in places that were not previously known to flood.”

It states that rising sea levels and an increase of heavy rainfalls are causing more properties to be at risk of flooding.

It says more than 40,000 properties in the state are at risk of permanent coastal flooding by 2050 as sea levels are likely to “meet or exceed 2.1 feet about 2000 levels.”

Heavy rain falls are also increasing at “levels significan­tly above historic trends, placing inland properties at greater risk of flash flooding.”

Because these factors are expected to increase over the years, sellers are now required to disclose if the property is located within a Federal Emergency Management Area (FEMA) Flood Hazard

Zone Area.

Properties within a Special Flood Hazard Area, also known as the 100year floodplain, have a 1% annual chance of flood hazard. And properties within a Moderate Risk Flood Hazard Area, also known as the 500-year floodplain, have a 0.2% annual chance of flood hazard.

Sellers are also expected to disclose if the property has experience­d flooding and if it requires flood insurance, among other questions.

Buyers and renters can also search the property by typing in its address into an interactiv­e website. The New Jersey Flood Risk Notificati­on Tool color codes the various flood hazard zones indicating whether the property has a 1% or 0.2% annual chance of flood hazard. It also notes future chances of flooding.

Landlords will also be expected to notify tenants signing or renewing leases of whether the building is located

 ?? THOMAS P. COSTELLO/ASBURY PARK PRESS ?? A garbage truck plows through high water along East Main Street in Manasquan on Dec. 18. Heavy rain falls are increasing at “levels significan­tly above historic trends, placing inland properties at greater risk of flash flooding,” according to new research.
THOMAS P. COSTELLO/ASBURY PARK PRESS A garbage truck plows through high water along East Main Street in Manasquan on Dec. 18. Heavy rain falls are increasing at “levels significan­tly above historic trends, placing inland properties at greater risk of flash flooding,” according to new research.

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