Updated about 1 month ago on . Most recent reply
How do I assess future risk?
How do you assess future risk when running numbers on a property?
How do I know what insurance will cost in the future? What if certain areas have a history of spiking premiums?
How do I know if an area has future climate issues (flooding, etc)? If insurance spikes and I need flood insurance eventually, this could impact my cash flow greatly in the future.
Most Popular Reply
You have to hedge against the risk you described or don't buy investment properties. Define your goals and keep reserves the entire time. Manage your personal finances and keep a 6-month emergency fund. Protect your properties with insurance and add an umbrella policy for additional protection.
I deal with flood plain regulations for my 9-5 job (violations and permitting). The best course of action is to avoid buying in them completely. Don't be fooled by cheap real estate and cash-flow. The risk isn't worth the reward if a 100 year flood occurs. I'm saying this from experience and the nightmares people deal with because they bought (or inherited) a house near a river or stream.
Check your states website for detailed mapping tools. Below is the FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer where you can search for an address and create a report. Insurance companies live and die by these maps. In my state we have a DNR "Best available flood hazard" layer tool which combines detailed studies a individual streams. Insurance companies currently do not use these maps but it's a "snap shot" into an area that's flood prone. Adding flood insurance to property that's not in a FEMA mapped flood zone is extremely inexpensive. We added a flood policy to our primary residence based on the water drainage, neighbors stories about our lot, and experience in the industry. Our flood insurance policy is like $30 per month.
https://hazards-fema.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index...



