January 13, 2025

CFPB: New Report Finds Hundreds of Thousands of Mortgages in Southeast and Central Southwest U.S. Likely Underinsured Against Flood Risk

Homeowners facing flooding from rivers and creeks more likely to be underinsured than coastal residents

Today, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) issued a new report that found significant differences in the likelihood that homeowners with a mortgage are adequately insured against flooding based both on location and on income and assets. According to findings, homeowners in coastal areas were most likely to have flood insurance and generally had higher incomes and assets, suggesting that they were the best positioned to recover from flooding. Homeowners living near inland streams and rivers, however, were less likely to have flood insurance and less likely to have other financial resources to draw on to recover from a flood. The report uses a sample of mortgage applications from 2018-2022.

This report looks at flood risk in the southeast and central southwest census regions of the United States, as measured by flood risk data from both the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the First Street Foundation. FEMA’s assessment of flood risk is retrospective and focuses mostly on coastal flooding, while the First Street Foundation data better identifies inland flooding as well as having a forward-looking measure of flood risk. The analysis shows that the flood risk exposure of the mortgage market is more extensive and more geographically dispersed than previously understood. Homeowners can have significantly different access to insurance and therefore sharply different financial outcomes based on whether their risk of flooding comes from the coast or from inland rivers, streams, rainfall, and stormwater flooding.

The report’s key findings include:

Read today’s report, Flood Risk and the US Mortgage Market.

Consumers can submit complaints about financial products and services by visiting the CFPB’s website or by calling (855) 411-CFPB (2372).

Employees who believe their company has violated federal consumer financial protection laws are encouraged to send information about what they know to whistleblower@cfpb.gov.

This post was originally published here.