Use the menus above to navigate by City Departments or Categories.
Use the menus above to navigate by City Departments or Categories.
You can also use the Search function below to find specific content on our site.
The City of Sacramento strongly encourages all property owners within Sacramento to carry a flood insurance policy of to help protect themselves and their property.
If you have questions regarding your flood risks and insurance needs, contact the City’s Floodplain Hotline at 916-808-5061 or floodinfo@cityofsacramento.org.
While less than 25 percent of the City of Sacramento is within a "Special Flood Hazard Area," any property, in or out of a Special Flood Hazard Area is at risk of flooding because the City is protected by levees.
Sacramento's vast floodplain and flooding tendencies are due to our neighboring Sacramento and American rivers, as well as our local creeks and streams and drainage systems, which rely on pumps to drain properly.
These flooding risks mean that it is important that you and your family protect yourself and your property against flooding.
There are many reasons why Sacramento area property owners should carry and maintain flood insurance:
The National Flood Insurance Program has updated its risk-rating methodology through a new pricing structure, called "Risk Rating 2.0."
The methodology leverages best practices and cutting-edge technology to enable FEMA to deliver rates that are actuarily sound, equitable, easier to understand and better reflect a property's flood risk.
Risk Rating 2.0 methodology applied to new policies as of Oct. 2, 2021 and April 1, 2022 for renewing policies.
The National Flood Insurance Program has implemented Congressionally mandated reforms required by the Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act of 2014 that repeal and modify the Biggert-Waters Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2012.
Flood insurance rates and other charges will be revised for new or existing policies beginning on April 1, 2015.
In addition to insurance rates, other changes resulting from Biggert-Waters and the Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act will be implemented that will affect the total amount a policyholder pays for a flood insurance policy.
Highlights of some of those changes can be found at on FEMA's website.
The Special Flood Hazard Area, as designated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, represents the 100-year regulatory floodplain.
This means that in any given year, properties in this area have a one-in-100 chance of becoming flooded. Property owners in a Special Flood Hazard Area are only allowed to carry regular or Standard flood insurance which is available through the National Flood Insurance Program.
Find a local flood insurance agent at FloodSmart
ON THIS PAGE