Spring - Klein Edition | May 2026

Navigating flood protection From the cover

The big picture

there was a “significant expansion in the maps” driven by a 30% increase in rainfall rates. “Our stance has always been and will always be that everyone in Harris County should have flood insurance no matter where you live,” Woodell said. As for cost, Houston-area insurance agent Jose Medrano said every property is unique and the map alone no longer determines premiums. In 2023, FEMA implemented a new pricing system called Risk Rating 2.0 that uses factors such as home elevation, distance to flood sources and construction history to calculate quotes.

A before-and-after glimpse of the preliminary maps indicates more Klein-area homes fall within a high-risk flood zone, potentially impacting flood insurance requirements for certain residents. The February draft reflects nearly two decades of change, as FEMA last released flood maps in 2007 using data from Tropical Storm Allison, per the agency’s website. Emily Woodell, HCFCD chief external affairs officer, said updated insurance requirements won’t take effect until the map is finalized in two to three years. She said HCFCD doesn’t know the exact number of homes now mapped in a floodplain, but

It’s been over two months since the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Harris County Flood Control District released long- awaited draft maps highlighting updated flood risks across the region. While the data is a work in progress, local homeowners are wondering how the changes will impact their bills. FEMA requires all property owners with a federally backed mortgage living in a 100-year floodplain— areas with a 1% annual chance of flooding—to obtain flood insurance through private insurers or the National Flood Insurance Program, known as NFIP.

NFIP policyholder premium changes, 2025 Monthly premiums shifted across Spring-Klein in the past year based on an NFIP matrix called Risk Rating 2.0.

ZIP codes

Policy count

$20+ decrease

$10-$20 decrease

$0-$10 decrease

$0-$10 increase

$10-$20 increase

$20+ increase

77389

99 TOLL

77070 3,985

1.8%

0.3% 0.5% 96.3% 0.9% 0.2%

77388

77379 6,753

0.4% 0.3% 5.9% 92.4% 0.7% 0.2%

77379

77388 3,316

1%

0.2% 4.3% 93.8% 0.6% 0%

249

1960

77068

77389 3,209

0.7% 0.1%

13.9% 84.7% 0.6% 0.1%

77070

77069

77068 876

3.7%

0.9% 2.3%

90.2% 2.4%

0.6%

45

77069 2,001

0.7% 0.2% 0.1%

97%

1.3%

0.6%

N

NOTE: DATA REFERS TO POLICIES FOR SINGLE-FAMILY HOMES. ONE HOUSING UNIT MAY CARRY MORE THAN ONE POLICY, AS COVERAGE FOR THE BUILDING AND PERSONAL BELONGINGS ARE PACKAGED SEPARATELY. SOURCE: NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM/COMMUNITY IMPACT

Occupied housing units vs. NFIP flood insurance policies in Harris County

Another detail

The cost

20.4%

Medrano said standard homeowners insurance does not cover flood-related damages. “Flood insurance, what that covers is damage to your property if water comes from the ground up,” he said. “Regular home insurance is if the water comes in from the sky down.” Residents can obtain flood insurance directly through FEMA or through its Write Your Own Program, which is a list of private companies that issue standardized policies regulated by the NFIP.

For those weighing the cost of flood insurance, affordability concerns may tip the scale away from the additional coverage. Annual flood insurance costs vary greatly for Harris County residents—anywhere from $500 to more than $1,000—according to FEMA data. Tom Steinbacher, like many Houston-area residents, used Hurricane Harvey to determine if he needed flood insurance for his Klein-area home. He said homes down the street flooded during the 2018 storm, but water levels at his property never exceeded the yard. Steinbacher said the extra coverage makes sense for residents in more flood-prone areas, but for his home he doesn’t consider it a necessity worth the cost. “If I didn’t flood during Harvey, I cannot fathom a torrential downpour that would cause my house to flood,” he said. Medrano said residents living outside of the 100-year floodplain may be eligible to purchase

1.175M Total occupied housing units

240,031 Total NFIP policy count in Harris County

20.42 Estimated flood insurance policies for every 100 occupied units

NFIP claims filed, paid in unincorporated Harris County*

Write your own: Private insurers issue the policy, but NFIP pays the claim. Direct

NOTE: ONE HOUSING UNIT MAY CARRY MORE THAN ONE POLICY, AS COVERAGE FOR THE BUILDING AND PERSONAL BELONGINGS ARE PACKAGED SEPARATELY. SOURCE: NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM AND U.S. CENSUS BUREAU/ COMMUNITY IMPACT

Number of claims

37,093

12,716

Total: 49,809

subsidized flood insurance through the NFIP at a lower rate. Additionally, the NFIP offers a discount for properties now in a high-risk zone based on new mapping.

Net dollars paid

$2.08B

$477.34M

Total: $2.56B

SOURCE: NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE PROGRAM/COMMUNITY IMPACT DATA COLLECTED THROUGH DEC. 31 *DOES NOT INCLUDE INCORPORATED CITIES WITHIN HARRIS COUNTY

20

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Powered by