Watch Chris explain this in detail
If your flood insurance renewal increased exactly 18%, it wasn’t random.
It wasn’t a typo.
And it wasn’t your agent making a mistake.
18% is the maximum annual increase allowed under FEMA’s Risk Rating 2.0.
And if your property is below its actuarial target rate, you may see this increase again next year… and possibly for several years after that.
Millions of homeowners in Flood Zone AE across the country are experiencing this exact increase.
Under the old system, flood insurance was primarily based on flood zone.
The new system, called FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 pricing methodology, replaced the old zone-based rating approach.
Many homes were underpriced for decades.
Instead of raising premiums all at once, Congress capped annual increases at 18%.
So FEMA raises your rate 18% per year until it reaches the full actuarial cost.
There is no appeal for the increase itself.
Federal law caps NFIP increases at 18% - it's written directly into statutes.
This depends on how far your current premium is from the actuarial target.
The frustrating part? FEMA does not disclose your property’s target rate.
| Year | Premium | Cumulative Paid |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $1,500 | $1,500 |
| Year 2 | $1,770 | $3,270 |
| Year 3 | $2,089 | $5,359 |
| Year 4 | $2,465 | $7,824 |
| Year 5 | $2,908 | $10,732 |
That’s nearly double in five years.
If your escrow account runs short and your mortgage payment increases, these rising premiums can directly impact your monthly finances.
Take the 2-minute scorecard and find out if you're overpaying
Within NFIP? No.
Under federal law, the increases are automatic.
However, you do have options:
You can switch to a private flood insurance policy to step off the NFIP entirely.
Private carriers are not subject to Risk Rating 2.0’s annual escalator.
Many Zone AE homeowners find rates 30%–50% lower.
Private carriers offer stable pricing without mandatory 18% escalators, giving you predictable costs year to year.
If your elevation data is inaccurate or missing, correcting it may reduce your premium.
Incorrect rebuild cost inputs can inflate your rate.
You can also Send us your current dec page to have us review your policy and confirm your numbers.
The increases continue until your premium reaches its target.
And because they compound, waiting costs money.
The best time to compare options was last year. The second-best time is now.
For NFIP policies, yes. The 18% cap is federally mandated.
You cannot appeal the increase itself, but you can challenge incorrect property data.
Typically only if you switch carriers, correct rating inputs, or reduce coverage.
Private carriers must meet lender compliance standards and are regulated at the state level.
You didn’t cause the 18% increase.
You didn’t make a mistake.
You’re on a federally capped pricing escalator.
The question is whether you stay on it.
Send us your current dec page.
We will build your personal 5-year premium forecast showing exactly what you will pay if you stay on NFIP versus what the private market offers today.
No cost. No obligation. Just the math.