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FludZone

Taylor, MI Flood Zone Lookup

Last updated: March 2026

Taylor faces flooding from Ecorse Creek and the Rouge River in Wayne County. Heavy rainfall overwhelms urban drainage infrastructure and causes flooding in residential neighborhoods.

Wayne County has recorded 2,879 NFIP flood insurance claims since 1978, totaling $13.5M in payouts. Explore the full NFIP claims data by state and county to see how this area compares nationally.

FEMA Region

Region 5

NFIP Policies

4,463

Wayne County

Avg. Premium

$543/yr

Wayne County

FEMA Flood Risk Profile: Wayne County

Based on FEMA's National Risk Index, which evaluates flood risk at the county level using historical loss data, exposure, and vulnerability.

Inland Flood Risk

Very High

Est. annual loss: $237.3M

Coastal Flood Risk

Relatively Low

Est. annual loss: $90K

Hurricane Risk

Very Low

Est. annual loss: $120K

Social Vulnerability: Relatively High
Community Resilience: Relatively Moderate

Source: FEMA National Risk Index, county-level assessment. Individual property risk may vary.

Federal Flood Disaster History: Wayne County

Wayne County has been included in 6 federal flood-related disaster declarations.

2024Severe Storms, Tornadoes, and FloodingFlood
2014Severe Storms and FloodingFlood
2005Hurricane Katrina EvacuationHurricane
1980Severe Storms & FloodingFlood
1973Severe Storms & FloodingFlood
1972Severe Storms & FloodingFlood

These declarations affected communities across Wayne County, including Taylor.

Source: OpenFEMA Disaster Declarations Summaries API. Data sourced February 2026.

NFIP Flood Insurance Claims: Wayne County

Properties in Wayne County have filed 2,879 NFIP flood insurance claims totaling $13.5M in payouts since 1978. The average claim payout is $5K.

Highest-Claim Years

1985

470 claims - $1.4M

2014

444 claims - $2.8M

2019

182 claims - $1.6M

Claims by Flood Zone

Zone A
1,004(avg. $3K)
Zone AE
975(avg. $6K)
Zone X
756(avg. $5K)
Zone AO
6(avg. $3K)
Zone D
3(avg. $3K)

Source: OpenFEMA NFIP Claims API. Data sourced March 2026. See national claims data.

Active NFIP Policies: Wayne County

Wayne County currently has 4,463 active NFIP flood insurance policies with an average annual premium of $543, totaling $2.4M in annual premiums.

Average Annual Premium

Wayne County$543
National Average$915

Policies by Flood Zone

Zone AE
3,403(avg. $557/yr)
Zone X
992(avg. $490/yr)
Zone A
53(avg. $637/yr)
Zone AO
15(avg. $505/yr)

Source: OpenFEMA NFIP Policies API. Data sourced March 2026.

Flood Insurance Coverage: Wayne County

Only roughly 1 in 159 households in Wayne County carries NFIP flood insurance (0.6% of estimated households). With 59 recorded flood events and $1.3B in damage, most flood losses in this county are likely uninsured.

Penetration Rate

0.6%

roughly 1 in 159 households

Historical Claims Ratio

1 in 2

2,879 claims over 45+ years across 4,463 current policies

Avg. Claim Payout

$4,695

Per claim, county-wide since 1978

Historically, Wayne County has averaged 1 claim for every 2 active policies (since 1978). This compares cumulative claims against today's policy count and does not predict future claim likelihood.

Coverage data: NFIP policies as of March 2026, claims since 1978 (March 2026), population from FEMA NRI. All figures are county-wide and include Taylor.

What Your Flood Zone Means in Taylor

Taylor faces flood risk primarily from river and stream overflow during heavy rainfall, snowmelt, or upstream dam releases. When rivers exceed their banks, floodwaters spread across low-lying areas mapped in AE and A zones. The most common FEMA flood zone designations in Taylor are Zone AE, Zone X. FEMA's National Risk Index estimates the county's annual expected loss from inland flooding at over $237.3M.

Riverine flood risk in Taylor is driven by the proximity and elevation of properties relative to nearby waterways. Properties closer to rivers with lower ground elevations typically face higher flood insurance premiums under FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0. If your property is in a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) and you have a federally regulated or government-backed mortgage, federal law generally requires your lender to ensure you carry flood insurance.

River flood maps can change when FEMA conducts new Flood Insurance Studies or when development alters drainage patterns. Letters of Map Amendment (LOMA) can remove individual properties if the natural ground elevation was always above the Base Flood Elevation and the property was inadvertently mapped in the SFHA. Use our free lookup tool to check the current flood zone for any Taylor address.

Repetitive Loss Properties: Wayne County

Wayne County has 184 properties with multiple flood insurance losses, including 5 severe repetitive loss properties. 1 properties have received FEMA mitigation funding. Severe repetitive loss is a subset of multiple loss, not a separate count. Data sourced March 2026.

Multiple Loss

184

2+ claims within 10 years

Severe Repetitive Loss

5

4+ claims or 2 exceeding value

Mitigated

1

Received FEMA mitigation

By Flood Zone

Zone AE
144
Zone X
20
Zone A
16
Zone AO
1

Zone data available for 181 of 184 properties.

Source: OpenFEMA NFIP Multiple Loss Properties. Data sourced March 2026.

Recorded Flood Events: Wayne County

NOAA has recorded 59 flood events in Wayne County since 1996, causing $1.3B in damage.

Costliest Events

August 11, 2014Flash Flood$1.1B
June 26, 2021Flash Flood$139M
May 1, 2019Flash Flood$64M
September 11, 2000Flash Flood$20M
August 24, 2023Flood$3M

Events by Type

Flash Flood
35
Flood
24

Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, 1996-2026. Data sourced March 2026.

Flood Mitigation: Wayne County

FEMA has funded mitigation for 150 properties in Wayne County, investing $1.3M in flood risk reduction. Common mitigation actions include acquisition (buying and demolishing flood-prone structures), elevation (raising buildings above flood level), and safe rooms (wind/storm shelters for tornado and hurricane protection).

By Action Type

Acquisition
103
Other
28
Elevation
17
Floodproofing
2

Source: OpenFEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance. Data sourced March 2026.

Flood Insurance Discount: Taylor

Taylor participates in FEMA's Community Rating System (CRS), a voluntary program that rewards communities for flood mitigation efforts beyond minimum NFIP requirements. Residents in the Special Flood Hazard Area may qualify for reduced flood insurance premiums.

CRS Class

Class 9

SFHA Premium Discount

5% off

CRS classes range from 1 (best) to 10 (no discount). Taylor's Class 9 rating means NFIP policyholders in the SFHA can receive up to a 5% discount on their flood insurance premiums. Properties outside the SFHA may receive a 5% discount.

Source: FEMA Community Rating System, April 2026. Discounts apply to NFIP policies only.

Taylor, MI Flood Zone FAQ

What flood zones are in Taylor, MI?

The most common FEMA flood zones in Taylor are Zone AE, Zone X. Properties in these high-risk zones (SFHA) may require flood insurance with a federally regulated or government-backed mortgage.

Is flood insurance required in Taylor?

If your Taylor property is in a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA) and you have a federally regulated or government-backed mortgage, federal law generally requires your lender to ensure you carry flood insurance. Properties in Zone X are not federally required to carry flood insurance, though coverage is still recommended since over 40% of all NFIP flood claims come from Zone X properties.

How do I check my flood zone in Taylor?

Enter your Taylor address in the search tool above for an instant flood zone determination. Results include your FEMA flood zone, SFHA status, base flood elevation (if available), and FIRM panel information, pulled directly from FEMA's National Flood Hazard Layer.

Does Taylor offer flood insurance discounts?

Yes. Taylor participates in FEMA's Community Rating System (CRS) with a Class 9 rating, qualifying residents in the Special Flood Hazard Area for up to a 5% discount on NFIP flood insurance premiums. Properties outside the SFHA may receive a 5% discount.

Has Taylor experienced major flooding events?

Wayne County, where Taylor is located, has been part of 6 federal disaster declarations for flooding, hurricanes, or severe storms. The most recent was Severe Storms, Tornadoes, and Flooding in 2024. Federal disaster declarations are issued when flooding overwhelms local resources and triggers FEMA assistance programs.

How many flood insurance claims have been filed in Taylor?

Wayne County has recorded 2,879 NFIP flood insurance claims totaling $13.5M in payouts since 1978. The year with the most claims was 1985, with 470 claims and $1.4M in payouts. These figures cover all NFIP claims in the county, including Taylor.

How many flood insurance policies are active in Taylor?

Wayne County currently has 4,463 active NFIP flood insurance policies with an average annual premium of $543. The most policies are in Zone AE (3,403 policies). These figures cover all active NFIP policies in the county.

How many Taylor properties have flooded repeatedly?

Wayne County has 184 properties with multiple flood losses on record, including 5 severe repetitive loss properties. These are properties that have experienced four or more NFIP claims of $5,000+ or two claims exceeding the building value.

Can my Taylor property be removed from a high-risk flood zone?

Yes, if your property's natural ground elevation is above the Base Flood Elevation and FEMA inadvertently mapped it in a high-risk zone, you can apply for a Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA). A successful LOMA removes the property from the Special Flood Hazard Area, generally eliminating the federal mandatory flood insurance requirement. You will need an elevation certificate from a licensed surveyor. If a property was raised above the BFE with fill material, the process is a LOMR-F rather than a LOMA.

What is Base Flood Elevation in Taylor?

Base Flood Elevation (BFE) is the predicted height of floodwaters during a 1% annual chance (100-year) flood, shown on FEMA maps as an elevation number in feet above sea level. In Taylor's Zone AE areas, BFE lines appear on the FIRM as wavy contours labeled with elevation values. Properties with a lowest floor at or above the BFE typically qualify for significantly lower NFIP flood insurance premiums.

Look Up Any Taylor, MI Address

Enter a Taylor, MI address to instantly check its FEMA flood zone designation, SFHA status, and insurance requirements.

Disclaimer: Flood risk data on this page is sourced from FEMA datasets including the National Risk Index, NFIP claims and policy records, disaster declarations, and the Community Rating System. These datasets were last extracted on March 2026 and may not reflect the most recent changes. This page is for informational purposes only and is not a certified flood zone determination. Always verify current flood zone status through FEMA or a licensed determination provider before making property, insurance, or lending decisions.