Skip to main content

Informational use only. Not a certified flood determination service.

FludZone

Nebraska Flood Zones

Nebraska faces flooding from the Missouri, Platte, Elkhorn, and Loup river systems. The devastating 2019 bomb cyclone caused catastrophic flooding across the state, with ice jams, dam failures, and widespread inundation affecting communities statewide.

1 of 93 Nebraska counties are rated high or very high for inland flood risk by FEMA's National Risk Index. 8 communities participate in FEMA's Community Rating System, qualifying residents for flood insurance discounts of up to 25%.

FEMA Region

Region 7

Also covers Iowa, Kansas, Missouri

NFIP Policies

12,000

Common Zones

Nebraska Flood Risk Overview

County-level risk ratings from FEMA's National Risk Index across 93 Nebraska counties.

Inland Flood Risk

1 of 93 counties rated high or very high

Source: FEMA National Risk Index, county-level assessment.

Federal Flood Disaster History

Nebraska has received 21 federal disaster declarations for flooding, hurricanes, severe storms, and coastal storms.

2010s

5

2000s

1

1990s

4

1970s

4

1960s

7

Recent Declarations

2019Severe Storms and FloodingFlood
2019Severe Winter Storm, Straight-Line Winds, and FloodingFlood
2011FloodingFlood
2010Severe Storms, Ice Jams, and FloodingFlood
2005Hurricane Katrina EvacueesHurricane
1993Severe Storms and FloodingFlood
1993Ice Jams & FloodingFlood
1992Severe Storms & FloodingFlood

Showing 8 most recent of 21 total declarations.

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

NFIP Flood Insurance Claims

Nebraska properties have filed 6,067 NFIP flood insurance claims totaling $97.3M in payouts since 1978. The average claim payout is $16K.

Claims by Decade

2020s

125

2010s

2,449

2000s

439

1990s

1,301

1980s

1,397

1970s

356

Highest-Claim Years

20191,165 claims$51.9M
1984693 claims$5.4M
1993691 claims$6.3M
2011396 claims$7.5M
2010377 claims$7.2M

Claims by Flood Zone

Zone A

2,279

Zone AE

1,715

Zone X

1,194

Zone AO

330

Zone AH

27

Zone AOB

20

Zone AHB

6

Zone V

3

Source: OpenFEMA NFIP Claims API. Data sourced February 2026.

Flood Insurance Discounts in Nebraska

8 Nebraska communities participate in FEMA's Community Rating System (CRS), earning flood insurance premium discounts for residents in Special Flood Hazard Areas. CRS classes in Nebraska range from 5 to 9, with discounts from 5% to 25%.

Lincoln

Class 5 - 25% discount

Omaha

Class 7 - 15% discount

Papillion

Class 7 - 15% discount

Fremont

Class 8 - 10% discount

Scottsbluff

Class 8 - 10% discount

Valley

Class 9 - 5% discount

Waterloo

Class 9 - 5% discount

Waverly

Class 9 - 5% discount

Source: FEMA Community Rating System, October 2025. Discounts apply to NFIP policies only.

Look Up Any Nebraska Address

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

Free Flood Zone Lookup

Nebraska Cities

Explore flood zone information for major cities in Nebraska.

Nebraska Flood Zone FAQ

How do I check if my Nebraska property is in a flood zone?

Enter your NE address in FludZone's free lookup tool. We query FEMA's National Flood Hazard Layer in real-time to show your flood zone designation, whether flood insurance is required, and your property's risk level.

Do I need flood insurance in Nebraska?

If your Nebraska property is in a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA), meaning zones starting with A or V, 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 subject to the federal mandate but lenders may still require coverage, and it is often recommended given Nebraska's flood history.

What are the most common flood zones in Nebraska?

The most common FEMA flood zone designations in Nebraska are Zone AE, Zone A, Zone X. Each zone reflects a different level of flood risk, from high-risk areas where flood insurance is generally required for federally regulated or government-backed mortgages to lower-risk areas where coverage is optional but recommended.

Can I remove my Nebraska property from a flood zone?

Yes, if your Nebraska property's natural ground elevation was always above the Base Flood Elevation and FEMA inadvertently mapped it in the SFHA, you can apply for a Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA) through FEMA. For properties in Nebraska's AE and A zones, the LOMA process is relatively straightforward when the elevation data supports it. If your property was raised above the BFE with fill, the process is a LOMR-F. A successful LOMA generally removes the federal mandatory flood insurance requirement, but your lender may still choose to require coverage. You'll need an elevation certificate from a licensed surveyor.

Do any Nebraska communities offer flood insurance discounts?

Yes, 8 Nebraska communities participate in FEMA's Community Rating System (CRS), a voluntary program that rewards communities for exceeding minimum flood mitigation standards. Residents in participating communities can receive NFIP premium discounts of up to 25% in the Special Flood Hazard Area. Properties outside the SFHA also benefit: CRS classes 1 through 6 receive a 10% discount, and classes 7 through 9 receive a 5% discount on NFIP premiums. Check your city's page on FludZone to see if your community participates.

Sources

This page summarizes information from FEMA and other official resources in plain language. For full technical details, see the links below.

Sources last verified: February 2026