Could tree removal raise your flood risk — and your insurance rates?
If you live in the Atlanta metro area, you’ve likely seen how heavy rain can overwhelm streets and yards in just minutes. But what you may not realize is how much trees, or the lack of them, influence that flood risk.
Now, with Atlanta passing a new tree conservation ordinance in 2025, many homeowners and developers are asking: Will this help solve the city’s flooding problems, or make flood insurance even more complicated?
At The Flood Insurance Guru, we’ve worked with homeowners across Georgia to help them understand how local policies, land development, and natural barriers like tree canopy affect flood insurance costs and eligibility.
In this article, you’ll learn:
Atlanta’s updated tree ordinance was approved in June 2025. While scaled down from earlier versions, it still makes several major changes that aim to preserve tree cover.
Key changes include:
What didn’t make it in? A requirement to preserve a certain percentage of tree canopy per lot. That omission has drawn criticism from conservationists — and raises questions about how much flood risk will actually be reduced.
Absolutely — and the science is clear.
Trees reduce stormwater runoff by capturing, absorbing, and slowing rainfall.
Large trees act like umbrellas. Their leaves capture rain before it hits the ground, reducing the total runoff volume.
Mature trees can intercept over 1,000 gallons of stormwater each year.
Tree roots break up soil and create pathways for rain to soak in rather than flow across pavement or compacted ground.
Infiltration rates under trees can be 2–3x higher than in open grass.
Trees act as natural pumps, drawing water out of the ground and releasing it into the atmosphere through leaves.
Tree roots and soil systems also remove pollutants — like oil, sediment, and fertilizer — from stormwater before it reaches streams.
Atlanta is especially vulnerable due to its geography and development pattern:
When trees are removed:
Tree loss doesn’t just affect where water goes — it affects how much, how fast, and how dirty it is when it gets there.
Even if your property isn’t in a mapped flood zone, it could flood, and that risk may rise if nearby trees are removed.
While FEMA flood insurance pricing doesn't directly factor in tree cover (yet), many private insurers and risk modeling tools do.
Preserving tree cover in your area isn’t just good for the environment, it might help keep your flood insurance available and affordable.
If you're unsure where your property stands, we can help.
Visit our Atlanta Flood Insurance page to explore your property’s risk, your zone status, and how to reduce your premiums, especially if you’ve seen flooding in your area before.
We’ll help you understand your true flood risk, and how to prepare for what’s next.
Atlanta’s new ordinance is a step in the right direction — but without mandatory preservation standards, it may not be enough.
Flood risk in Atlanta is growing, and much of it is being shaped not by rivers, but by rooftops, driveways, and disappearing trees.
At The Flood Insurance Guru, we believe in combining natural flood mitigation with smart insurance planning. Whether you’re in a mapped FEMA zone or not, tree loss and urban runoff are risks you can’t afford to ignore.
Atlanta’s new tree ordinance is about more than landscaping — it could influence future flooding across the city.
Homeowners are already seeing water where it’s never been before. And tree removal can make that worse.
If you’re in Atlanta and want to understand how this law affects your property and flood insurance, visit our Atlanta Flood Insurance page for expert guidance.
At The Flood Insurance Guru, we help you protect what matters most, not just from today’s rules, but tomorrow’s storms.