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DC Flood Zone Lookup: Find Your Property's Flood Risk

How to look up the flood zone for any Washington, DC address using the three authoritative tools — DOEE's DC Flood Risk Tool, FEMA's Flood Map Service Center, and First Street — plus what the zone designations mean and where the District floods.

DC Water Damage Resource — Editorial Desk Published Updated

This is the District’s flood-zone lookup desk. The fastest way to answer “is my address in a flood zone?” is to run it through three authoritative tools and compare the results, because each answers a slightly different question. Below is how to do that, what the answers mean, and where to go deeper.

The three flood-zone lookup tools for DC

ToolWhat it tells youBest forAuthority
DC Flood Risk Tool (dcfloodrisk.org)Current and projected (2080) flood depth and risk for a District addressUnderstanding how and how much a location floods, now and in the futureDOEE
FEMA Flood Map Service Center (msc.fema.gov)The regulatory flood zone — Zone AE, A, X, etc. — from the official FIRMInsurance requirements, mortgage rules, floodplain permitsFEMA / NFIP
First Street — Flood FactorA 1–10 property-level risk score blending climate and rainfall dataA quick comparative score and future-risk contextFirst Street (independent)

Each tool is covered in depth on its own page: the DC Flood Risk Tool walkthrough and the FEMA Flood Map Service Center guide.

What the answer means

A lookup returns a flood zone designation — a code that classifies the flood risk FEMA has mapped at that location. The most important distinction is between high-risk zones (the Special Flood Hazard Area, where flood insurance is federally required for mortgaged properties) and the moderate-to-minimal-risk Zone X.

The full set of codes — Zone AE, Zone A, Zone X, the floodway, and the base flood elevation — is explained on the flood zone designations reference.

Where Washington, DC actually floods

Mapped and observed flood risk in the District falls into three broad patterns:

  • Riverine and tidal — along the Potomac and Anacostia rivers and the tidal flats. Covered on the Potomac & Anacostia flood zones page.
  • Interior / sewer-related — low-lying neighborhoods such as Bloomingdale and LeDroit Park, where heavy rain overwhelms the combined sewer system. Covered on interior flood-prone areas.
  • Ward-by-ward variation — Wards 5, 6, 7 and 8 carry the most mapped and observed risk. See the flood risk by ward breakdown.

After the lookup

If your address carries meaningful risk, two logistics questions usually follow: insurance and work permits. Flood-insurance basics for the District — including the NFIP and DOEE’s role — are on the flood insurance in DC page. If you need to repair or tear out water-damaged material, start with the DC permits and licensing desk.

Frequently asked questions

How do I find out if my DC address is in a flood zone?
Which DC flood map is the official one for insurance and permits?
Is most of Washington, DC in a flood zone?
What does it mean if my address is not in a mapped flood zone?

Sources & official references

  1. 01DC Flood Risk Tool (DOEE) — District-specific current and future flood-risk mapping.
  2. 02FEMA Flood Map Service Center — Official FIRM panels and regulatory flood zones.
  3. 03DOEE — Floodplain Management — District floodplain program and guidance.
  4. 04First Street — Flood Factor — Property-level climate-adjusted flood risk scores.

Verified against DOEE, FEMA MSC and First Street as of June 2026. · Last verified: