If you have bought a home, applied for a mortgage, or shopped for flood insurance, you have met FEMA’s flood-zone codes. Here is what each one actually means.
The answer first
A FEMA flood zone describes how likely a property is to flood, as mapped on a Flood Insurance Rate Map. Zones beginning with A or V are high-risk Special Flood Hazard Areas in the 1% annual chance (100-year) floodplain — flood insurance is mandatory there for federally backed mortgages. V and VE add coastal wave hazard and the strictest building rules. Zone X is moderate-to-minimal risk, with no federal insurance requirement.
The flood-zone codes at a glance
| Zone | Risk | High-risk (SFHA)? | What it means |
|---|---|---|---|
| X (unshaded) | Minimal | No | Outside the 0.2% (500-year) floodplain |
| X (shaded) / B | Moderate | No | Between the 100- and 500-year flood limits |
| A | High | Yes | 1% annual chance floodplain, no base flood elevation determined |
| AE | High | Yes | 1% annual chance floodplain with base flood elevations — the common modern high-risk zone |
| AH / AO | High | Yes | 1% annual chance shallow flooding (ponding or sheet flow), 1–3 ft |
| V | High (coastal) | Yes | Coastal 1% floodplain with wave action, no elevation set |
| VE | High (coastal) | Yes | Coastal 1% floodplain with wave action and base flood elevations |
| D | Undetermined | No (undetermined) | Possible but unstudied flood hazard |
The full descriptions are on our FEMA flood zones reference page.
What “1% annual chance” really means
The “100-year floodplain” is misleading shorthand. A 1% annual chance flood does not mean “once a century” — it means a 1% chance every single year. Over a 30-year mortgage, that compounds to roughly a 26% chance of at least one such flood. That is why lenders treat A and V zones seriously.
High-risk zones and mandatory insurance
If a federally regulated or insured lender finances a building in a Special Flood Hazard Area (any A or V zone), flood insurance is required for the life of the loan. Standard homeowners policies do not cover flood damage, so this is usually a separate National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) policy or private equivalent.
Why low-risk does not mean no-risk
It is a common and costly mistake to assume Zone X means “won’t flood.” Flash flooding, drainage failures and extreme rainfall regularly damage homes outside mapped high-risk areas — and a large share of NFIP claims come from exactly those properties. Coverage in Zone X is cheaper precisely because risk is lower, which can make it good value.
Flood risk in context
Flooding is one of the most widespread federally declared hazards in the US — see the states with the most flood declarations, led by Texas, California and Washington. To understand what a declaration unlocks after a flood, read understanding FEMA disaster declarations and what a disaster declaration means for homeowners and insurance.
HazardMap is not affiliated with or endorsed by FEMA. This is general information, not insurance or legal advice. Check your exact zone on the official FEMA Flood Map Service Center and confirm requirements with your lender and a licensed agent.