The flood insurance gap in the United States is big and it’s not getting better. And the consequences of that gap are about to worsen for property owners and state
and local governments, thanks to increasing rainfall amounts, stronger storm surge, more development in flood zones, cutbacks in federal aid, and aging river levees around the country.
That was the word from Moody’s Rating analysts who delved into the realities at a webinar Thursday.
“When flood losses happen and they are not absorbed by the shock absorber of insurance, they don’t disappear,” said Firas Saleh, director of insurance solutions and pro
duct management at Moody’s, the global ratings and analytics firm.
Some of those costs are shifted onto impacted households that do not carry adequate (or any) flood insurance, onto federal assistance programs, and—more and mor
e—to state and local governments, Saleh said. Government programs often are asked to pay for debris
removal, demolition of flooded structures, bridge replacement, road repairs and temporary housing.
But local property tax revenue often takes a dive after flooding events, as damaged sites lose value. Th
at’s especially true in smaller, less-affluent counties and cities. The decline can affect local credit ratings, costing jurisdictions more to issue bonds and borrow money.
After Hurricane Harvey in 2017, for example, a few coastal counties in Texas faced deficits after properties were reassessed and property tax revenue plummeted,
said Denise Rappamund, a vice president and senior analyst at Moody’s. Buncombe County, N
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orth Carolina, one of the places hit the hardest by Hurricane Helene flooding in 2024, saw its credit o
utlook rating temporarily downgraded to “negative,” explained Jennifer Chang, Moody’s Vice President and Senior Credit Officer.
As the current U.S. president and his administration have espoused major cuts in federal funding, including cuts to Federal Emergency Management Agency progr
ams, it will fall more on cities, counties and state governments to rebuild infrastructure after devastating floods, the analysts said.
And locals may be less financially prepared than they have been in decades: Several states in rec
ent years have reduced or eliminated their state income taxes, leaving smaller pots of money to handle greater losses. Florida lawmakers this year moved to cut much of the state’
s property taxes for homeowners. If approved by voters, that could cost local governments as much as $12 billion a year, some economists have warned.
Some of the states that have most embraced the Donald Trump ideology of government spending reductions are the ones that will feel the pain the most: The d
eep red states of Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and North Carolina, for example, received the most federal
disaster aid as a share of overall state revenue, from 2017 to 2025, the Moody’s team noted. Louisiana enjoyed the largest share in the country—more than 5% of its revenue came from federal disaster aid in recent years.
At the same time, participation in the National Flood Insurance Program has declined significantly in recent years, leaving some homeowners more exposed than ever, the Moody’s team pointed out. Some 470,000 NFIP policies were lost between 2018 and early this year. Since 2009, 5.6 million policies have left the program.



























