| Myths
and Facts About the NFIP
Who needs flood insurance? Everyone. And everyone in a participating
community of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) can buy flood
insurance. Nationwide more than 19,000 communities have joined the Program.
In some instances people have been told that they cannot buy flood insurance
because of where they live. To clear up this and other misconceptions
about National Flood Insurance, the NFIP has compiled the following
list of common myths about the Program, and the real facts behind them,
to give you the full story about this valuable protection.
1.
You can't buy flood insurance if you are located in a high-flood-risk
area.
You can buy National Flood Insurance no matter where you live if your
community participates in the NFIP, except in Coastal Barrier Resources
System (CBRS) areas. The Program was created in 1968 to provide flood
insurance to people who live in areas with the greatest risk of flooding,
called Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs). In fact, under the National
Flood Insurance Act, lenders must require borrowers whose property is
located within an SFHA to purchase flood insurance as a condition of
receiving a federally regulated mortgage loan. There is an exemption
for conventional loans on properties within CBRS areas.
Lenders should notify borrowers that their property is located in an
SFHA and National Flood Insurance is required.
2.
You can't buy flood insurance immediately before or during a flood.
You can purchase flood coverage at any time. There is a 30-day waiting
period after you've applied and paid the premium before the policy is
effective, with the following exceptions:
1) If the initial purchase of flood insurance is in connection with
the making, increasing, extending or renewing of a loan, there is no
waiting period. The coverage becomes effective at the time of the loan,
provided application and payment of premium is made at or prior to loan
closing. 2) If the initial purchase of flood insurance is made during
the 13-month period following the effective date of a revised flood
map for a community, there is a one-day waiting period. This only applies
where the Flood Insurnace Rate Map (FIRM) is revised to show the building
to be in a SFHA when it had not been in a SFHA.
The policy does not cover a "loss in progress," defined by
the NFIP as a loss occurring as of 12:01 a.m. on the first day of the
policy term. In addition, you cannot increase the amount of insurance
coverage you have during a loss in progress.
3.
Homeowners' insurance policies cover flooding.
Unfortunately, many homeowners do not find out until it is too late
that their homeowners' policies do not cover flooding. National Flood
Insurance protects your most valuable assets--your home and belongings.
4.
Flood insurance is only available for homeowners.
Flood insurance is available to protect homes, condominiums, apartments
and non-residential buildings including commercial structures. A maximum
of $250,000 of building coverage is available for single-family residential
buildings; $250,000 per unit for residential condominiums. The limit
for contents coverage on all residential buildings is $100,000, which
is also available to renters.
Commercial structures can be insured to a limit of $500,000 for the
building and $500,000 for the contents.
5.
You can't buy flood insurance if your property has been flooded.
You are still eligible to purchase flood insurance after your home,
apartment or business has been flooded, provided that your community
is participating in the NFIP.
6.
Only residents of high-flood-risk zones need to insure their property.
Even if you live in an area that is not flood-prone, it's advisable
to have flood insurance. Between 20 percent and 25 percent of the NFIP's
claims come from outside high-flood-risk areas. The NFIP's Preferred
Risk Policy, available for just over $100 per year, is designed for
residential properties located in low-to-moderate-flood risk zones.
7.
National Flood Insurance can only be purchased through the NFIP directly.
NFIP flood insurance is sold through private insurance companies and
agents, and is backed by the Federal government.
8.
The NFIP does not offer any type of basement coverage.
Yes, it does. The NFIP defines a basement as any
area of a building with a floor that is below ground level on all sides.
While flood insurance does not cover basement improvements, such as
finished walls, floors or ceilings, or personal belongings that may
be kept in a basement, such as furniture and other contents, it does
cover structural elements, essential equipment and other basic items
normally located in a basement. Many of these items are covered under
building coverage, and some are covered under contents coverage. The
NFIP encourages people to purchase both building and contents coverage
for the broadest protection.
The following items are covered under building coverage, as long as
they are connected to a power course and installed in their functioning
location:
·
Sump
pumps.
·
Well
water tanks and pumps, cisterns and the water in them.
·
Oil tanks
and the oil in them, natural gas tanks and the gas in them.
·
Pumps
and/or tanks used in conjunction with solar energy.
·
Furnaces,
hot water heaters, air conditioners, and heat pumps.
·
Electrical
junction and circuit breaker boxes and required utility connections.
·
Foundation
elements.
·
Stairways,
staircases, elevators and dumbwaiters.
·
Unpainted
drywalls and sheetrock walls and ceilings, including fiberglass insulation.
·
Cleanup.
The Following items are covered under contents coverage:
·
Clothes
washers.
·
Clothes
dryers.
·
Food
Freezers and the food in them.
9.
Federal disaster assistance will pay for flood damage.
Before a community is eligible for disaster assistance, it must be declared
a Federal disaster area. Federal disaster assistance declarations are
issued in less than 50 percent of flooding incidents. The premium for
an NFIP policy, averaging a little more than $350 a year, is less expensive
than interest on Federal disaster loans.
Furthermore, if you are uninsured and receive Federal disaster assistance
after a flood, you must purchase flood insurance to remain eligible
for future disaster relief.
10.
The NFIP encourages coastal development.
One of the NFIP's primary objectives is to guide development away from
high-flood-risk areas. NFIP regulations minimize the impact of structures
that are built in SFHAs by requiring them not to cause obstructions
to the natural flow of floodwaters. Also, as a condition of community
participation in the NFIP, those structures built within SFHAs must
adhere to strict floodplain management regulations.
In addition, the Coastal Barrier Resources Act (CBRA) of 1982 relies
on the NFIP to discourage building in fragile coastal areas by prohibiting
the sale of flood insurance in designated CBRA areas. While the NFIP
does not prohibit property owners from building along coastal areas,
any Federal financial assistance , including federally backed flood
insurance, is probibited. However, CBRA does not prohibit privately
financed development or insurance.
11.
The NFIP does not cover flooding resulting from hurricanes or the
overflow of rivers or tidal waters.
The NFIP defines covered flooding as a general and temporary condition
during which the surface of normally dry land is partially or completely
inundated. Two properties in the area or two or more acres must be affected.
Flooding can be caused by:
·
The overflow
of inland or tidal waters, or
·
The unusual
and rapid accumulation or runoff of surface waters from any source,
such as heavy rainfall, or
·
Mudslides,
i.e., mudflows, caused by flooding, that could be described as a river
of liquid and flowing mud and
·
The collapse
or destabilization of land along the shore of a lake or other body of
water, resulting from erosion or the effect of waves, or water currents
exceeding normal, cyclical levels.
12.
Wind-driven rain is considered flooding.
No, it isn't. Rain entering through wind-damaged windows, doors or a
hole in a wall or the roof, resulting in standing water or puddles,
is considered windstorm- rather than flood- damage. National Flood Insurance
only covers damage caused by the general condition of flooding (defined
above), typically caused by storm surge, wave wash, tidal waves, or
the overflow of any body of water over normally dry land areas. Buildings
that sustain this type of damage usually have a watermark, showing how
high the water rose before it subsided. Although the Standard Flood
Insurance Policy (SFIP) specifically excludes wind and hail damage,
most homeowners policies provide such coverage.
For more information about the NFIP, ask your insurance agent or company,
or call the NFIP's toll-free number at 1-888-FLOOD29, TDD# 1-800-427-5593.
F-002 (4/01)
Updated: April 26, 2001
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