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How to Dispute a FEMA Flood Zone Designation

If you believe your property is incorrectly classified in a FEMA flood zone, there are official processes to challenge the designation and potentially reduce or eliminate your flood insurance requirements.

Last updated: February 2026

Why Flood Zone Disputes Happen

FEMA flood maps are based on engineering studies, topographic data, and hydrologic models that cover large geographic areas. While these studies are thorough, they may not capture the specific elevation or conditions of every individual property. Flood maps can also become outdated as terrain changes, new development alters drainage patterns, or better elevation data becomes available.

Common reasons property owners dispute their flood zone designation include:

  • Elevation data errors - the property sits above the Base Flood Elevation (BFE) but was mapped in a high-risk zone due to coarse topographic data
  • Outdated maps - the FIRM has not been updated to reflect new construction, grading, fill, drainage improvements, or channel modifications
  • Boundary inaccuracies - the property is near a flood zone boundary and the map resolution incorrectly places it inside the Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA)
  • Flood control improvements - levees, dams, retention basins, or other flood control infrastructure has been built or improved since the last map update
  • Better technical data - LiDAR surveys or updated hydrologic studies show different flood conditions than what the current map reflects

Three Ways to Dispute Your Flood Zone

FEMA provides three official pathways for challenging a flood zone designation. The right option depends on your situation and the reason your property may be incorrectly mapped.

LOMA (Letter of Map Amendment)

When: Your property was always above the BFE but was mapped incorrectly

Cost: $0 FEMA fee

Timeline: Up to 60 days

Best for: Individual properties with natural elevation above BFE

LOMR (Letter of Map Revision)

When: Physical changes have altered flood conditions in the area

Cost: $6,750+ FEMA fee

Timeline: 6-12 months

Best for: Areas where construction, fill, or infrastructure changed flood risk

Formal Appeal

When: FEMA is proposing new flood maps that you believe are technically wrong

Cost: No FEMA fee

Timeline: During 90-day comment period

Best for: Property owners and communities during the map update process

Path 1: LOMA - Correcting a Mapping Error

A Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA) is the most common way individual property owners dispute their flood zone. A LOMA is appropriate when your property's natural ground elevation or structure elevation is at or above the BFE, but the FIRM incorrectly shows it within the SFHA. The key word is "natural" - the property must have always been above the BFE without the use of placed fill.

If your property was elevated above the BFE using placed fill (earth, gravel, or other material), you would need a LOMR-F (Letter of Map Revision based on Fill) instead. The LOMR-F process is similar to the LOMA process but requires documentation of the fill placement.

Steps to File a LOMA

1

Get an Elevation Certificate

Hire a licensed surveyor or professional engineer to prepare an Elevation Certificate (FEMA Form 81-31). This document records your property's elevation relative to the BFE. Expect to pay $500 to $2,000 depending on location and complexity.

2

Verify Your Eligibility

The Elevation Certificate must show that your Lowest Adjacent Grade (LAG) or lowest floor elevation is at or above the BFE. If it is below, a LOMA will not be approved.

3

Submit via LOMA-OAS

Use FEMA's online Letter of Map Amendment - Online Amendment System (LOMA-OAS) to submit your application electronically. You can also submit by mail using the MT-1 form, but the online system is faster.

4

Wait for FEMA Review

FEMA typically processes LOMA applications within 60 days at no charge. You may be contacted for additional information during review.

A successful LOMA removes the mandatory flood insurance requirement for federally regulated mortgages and typically reduces annual premiums by $1,000 to $3,000 or more. The investment in a surveyor often pays for itself within the first year.

Path 2: LOMR - When Conditions Have Changed

A Letter of Map Revision (LOMR) is used when physical changes to the floodplain have altered flood conditions. Unlike a LOMA, which corrects an individual mapping error, a LOMR officially revises the flood map boundaries, BFE values, or floodway delineations for a larger area.

LOMRs are typically filed by developers, communities, or property owners who have completed flood mitigation projects. Examples include constructing levees, improving drainage channels, filling land above the BFE, or building retention basins that reduce downstream flood risk.

What a LOMR Requires

  • Detailed hydrologic and hydraulic engineering analyses from a licensed professional engineer
  • As-built surveys documenting the completed construction
  • Community acknowledgment from your local floodplain administrator
  • FEMA MT-2 application forms
  • FEMA review fee starting at $6,750 (varies by scope and complexity)

Before starting a project intended to change your flood zone, consider applying for a CLOMR (Conditional Letter of Map Revision) first. A CLOMR is FEMA's preliminary review of your proposed project, confirming that the design would be acceptable before you invest in construction.

Path 3: Formal Appeal During Map Updates

When FEMA proposes new or updated flood maps for your community, there is a formal comment and appeal period before the maps become effective. This is a separate process from LOMAs and LOMRs, and it applies specifically to preliminary (not-yet-effective) maps.

How the Appeal Process Works

1

FEMA Issues Preliminary Maps

FEMA publishes preliminary flood maps for your community, showing proposed zone boundaries and BFE values. These maps are available for review at your local community offices and through the FEMA Map Service Center.

2

90-Day Comment Period Opens

Property owners and communities have 90 days to review the preliminary maps and submit comments or formal appeals. Comments express concerns; appeals require scientific or technical data challenging the map's accuracy.

3

Submit Your Appeal with Technical Data

A formal appeal must include scientific or technical data from a licensed surveyor or engineer that demonstrates the proposed map is incorrect. General disagreement or concerns about insurance costs are not sufficient grounds for a formal appeal.

4

FEMA Reviews and Resolves

FEMA evaluates the technical data and either adjusts the proposed map or issues a written response explaining why the original designation stands. All appeals must be resolved before the maps become effective.

The 90-day appeal window is a hard deadline. If you miss it, you cannot appeal the proposed maps and must wait until they take effect, then pursue a LOMA or LOMR through the standard process.

Which Dispute Process Is Right for You?

Your SituationProcessCostTimeline
Property naturally above BFE, mapped in SFHALOMA$500-$2,000 (surveyor only)Up to 60 days
Property elevated with placed fill above BFELOMR-F$500-$2,000 (surveyor only)Up to 60 days
Infrastructure changed flood conditionsLOMR$6,750+ (FEMA fee + engineering)6-12 months
New maps being proposed are incorrectFormal AppealEngineering costs (no FEMA fee)Within 90-day window

What You Cannot Dispute

Not all flood zone disagreements can be resolved through a dispute process. Understanding the limitations helps avoid spending money on applications that will not succeed.

  • Insurance cost complaints - high premiums alone are not grounds for a map change. FEMA maps flood risk, not insurance rates. Under Risk Rating 2.0, premiums are based on multiple factors beyond just zone designation
  • Future conditions - FEMA flood maps are based on current conditions. You cannot dispute a zone because you plan to make changes in the future (use a CLOMR for pre-approval of planned projects)
  • Flood risk opinions - disagreements not backed by scientific or technical data from a licensed professional will not be accepted
  • Effective maps without new data - once maps are effective, you cannot appeal them. You must use the LOMA or LOMR process with qualifying evidence
  • Properties below BFE - if your property elevation is genuinely below the BFE, no dispute process will remove you from the SFHA

After a Successful Dispute

When FEMA approves your dispute, several important changes take effect. Take these steps to ensure you benefit fully from the new designation.

Keep the determination letter

Store FEMA's official determination letter (LOMA, LOMR-F, or LOMR) with your property records. You will need it for lender and insurance communications, and future buyers will benefit from having it.

Notify your mortgage lender

Send a copy of the determination letter to your lender. If you were in the SFHA and are now removed, the federal mandatory flood insurance purchase requirement is generally eliminated for federally regulated mortgages. Your lender should update their records and stop requiring flood insurance escrow.

Contact your insurance agent

Your flood insurance premium should decrease significantly now that your property is in a lower-risk zone. Your agent can adjust your policy accordingly. Consider maintaining coverage even if no longer required, as about 25% of NFIP flood claims come from outside the SFHA.

Verify the NFHL is updated

After FEMA issues a determination, the National Flood Hazard Layer is updated to reflect the change. You can verify this by looking up your property on FludZone or the FEMA Map Service Center.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I dispute my FEMA flood zone designation?

Yes. Property owners can dispute a FEMA flood zone designation through several official processes. If your property was incorrectly mapped in a Special Flood Hazard Area, you can apply for a Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA). If physical changes have altered flood risk, you can request a Letter of Map Revision (LOMR). During the map update process, you can also file a formal appeal with supporting technical data.

How long does it take to dispute a flood zone designation?

The timeline depends on the dispute method. A LOMA application is typically processed by FEMA within 60 days. A LOMR can take 6 to 12 months due to the engineering review involved. Formal appeals during the map update process must be filed within the 90-day comment period and are resolved before the new map takes effect.

How much does it cost to dispute a flood zone?

FEMA charges no fee to process a LOMA application. The primary cost is hiring a licensed surveyor for an Elevation Certificate, typically $500 to $2,000. LOMRs require detailed engineering studies and carry FEMA review fees starting at $6,750. Formal appeals during the comment period have no FEMA fee but require technical data prepared by a licensed professional.

What evidence do I need to dispute a flood zone?

For a LOMA, you need an Elevation Certificate prepared by a licensed surveyor showing your property is at or above the Base Flood Elevation. For a LOMR, you need engineering analyses demonstrating that physical changes have altered flood conditions. For a formal appeal, you must provide scientific or technical data from a licensed professional that shows the proposed flood map is technically incorrect.

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, engineering, or insurance advice. Flood zone dispute outcomes depend on site-specific conditions and FEMA review. Consult a licensed surveyor, professional engineer, or floodplain management specialist before filing a dispute.

Related Resources

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

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Start by Checking Your Flood Zone

The first step in any dispute is knowing your current designation. Use FludZone to look up your property's FEMA flood zone, BFE, and any existing Letters of Map Change.