USA TODAY International Edition

Digital tool gauges your home’s flood risk

- Charisse Jones

With hurricane season in full swing, digital real estate site Realtor. com will help buyers figure out whether the home they’re eyeing is at risk of being flooded.

The measuremen­t, dubbed “Flood Factor” and created by the nonprofit First Street Foundation, will offer a score ranging from 1 to 10 to assess the risk of flooding to a home over the course of a 30- year mortgage.

The digital tool sheds light on a calamity that can financially devastate homeowners, but which many are unaware of when they buy.

“Historical­ly, determinin­g a property’s flood risk was an onerous process,” Leslie Jordan, senior vice president of product for Realtor. com, said in a statement. “In some cases, potential buyers would have no idea a property was in a flood zone until it was flagged by the mortgage company prior to closing, or in some cases not at all.”

The model looks at both the current flood risk and what risk a property faces in the future from four potential events – rainfall, storm surge, tidal sources and river overflow, noting that the danger posed can shift with a changing climate.

Users can access the rating by going to a listing and clicking below the map on the right, or by tapping the “flood” button on the search results page and map.

The tool covers areas that are not mapped by FEMA, the official gauge of flood hazards for the National Flood Insurance Program. Homes in a designated flood hazard area require the owner to buy flood insurance.

The site says having the additional source of informatio­n can help those on both sides of a real estate deal, arming sellers with informatio­n so they can mitigate the hazard, or alerting buyers to the need to buy a flood policy if necessary.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States