2026 New York County NY Risk Report
New York County has been included in 4 federal disaster declarations since 2000, including Hurricane Sandy, Hurricane Irene and Hurricane Ida.
New York County Map
FEMA Disaster Declarations
Major federal disaster declarations since 2000
Top Disaster Types
261 storm events recorded since 2015 (NOAA Storm Events Database)
Seasonal Risk Pattern
Monthly event frequency by disaster type
Municipality Risk Rankings
Sorted by flood zone coverage (highest first)
| Municipality | Flood Zone % | Population | Median Year Built |
|---|---|---|---|
| Battery Park City | 78% | 13,386 | 1995 |
| Financial District | 41% | 61,485 | 1968 |
| Lower East Side | 32% | 72,957 | 1932 |
| East Village | 18% | 44,441 | 1928 |
| Chelsea | 14% | 49,869 | 1942 |
| SoHo | 12% | 16,842 | 1900 |
| Harlem | 6% | 116,345 | 1925 |
| Upper East Side | 4% | 219,920 | 1940 |
Compared to Neighboring Counties
New York County ranks #4 of 4 in FEMA declarations
| Rank | County | FEMA Declarations | Flood Zone % |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Kings County | 8 | 17.3% |
| #2 | Queens County | 8 | 22.1% |
| #3 | Bronx County | 5 | 9.1% |
| #4 | New York County (this report) | 4 | 14.2% |
What This Means for Manhattan Homeowners
With 4 federal disaster declarations since 2000 and 14.2% of properties in FEMA flood zones, New York County ranks among the most disaster-prone counties in New York. That concentration of risk is not evenly distributed across the county — it is heavily weighted toward a small number of shoreline and low-lying municipalities. Lower Manhattan alone carries the highest flood zone exposure in the county, with neighborhoods built largely before modern flood-resistant construction codes took effect.
The seasonal pattern matters as much as the overall numbers. New York County's peak disaster months differ from inland counties — coastal flooding and hurricanes dominate late summer and fall, winter storms add a secondary peak from December through February, and flash flooding risk rises with spring thaw. Property owners who plan preventive maintenance against the wrong season often face avoidable damage. For example, a waterfront homeowner focused on summer hurricane prep but ignoring winter pipe insulation commonly experiences frozen-pipe burst damage in January and February, which accounts for a large share of the winter declarations in this county's record.
Insurance exposure in New York County is also unusual. The 14.2% flood zone coverage means a substantial portion of properties are legally required to carry flood insurance if they hold a federally-backed mortgage, yet FEMA data consistently shows many of these properties remain uninsured or underinsured for the actual replacement cost. After a major event like Hurricane Sandy in 2012, the out-of-pocket financial gap between actual damage and insurance payout averaged tens of thousands of dollars per household in the hardest-hit coastal towns.
For residents of Manhattan and surrounding communities, the practical takeaways are specific: verify your flood zone designation on FEMA's Flood Map Service Center, review whether your homeowner's policy excludes windstorm or sewer backup (both common exclusions in this county), identify a pre-selected restoration company that responds 24/7, and document your property contents in advance of hurricane season. The 41 average storm events per year make prepared response more important than in lower-risk regions.
Advanced DRI responds to emergencies in New York County 24/7 with crews from our nearby offices. We are IICRC-certified, carry all required state licenses, bill insurance companies directly, and handle every phase from emergency water extraction through full reconstruction. The Manhattan-area team has historical experience with the specific damage patterns common to this county — saltwater intrusion, wind-driven rain, storm surge, and cold-weather pipe failures.
New York County Disaster Risk — Frequently Asked Questions
What is the biggest disaster risk in New York County?▾
Which New York County town has the highest flood risk?▾
How does New York County compare to neighboring counties?▾
Do I need flood insurance in New York County?▾
What should I do if disaster strikes my Manhattan property?▾
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Data accuracy: FEMA disaster declarations (above) are pulled directly from the OpenFEMA API and represent verified federal records.
Storm event counts, flood zone percentages, municipality population, and median year-built figures shown in this report are illustrative estimates compiled for this preview. We are currently integrating live NOAA Storm Events Database, U.S. Census Bureau ACS, and FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer feeds to replace estimated values with verified data. Numbers should not be used for insurance, real-estate, or flood-zone determination — consult FEMA Flood Map Service Center for official property-level data.
Sources: FEMA Disaster Declarations Database (verified), NOAA Storm Events Database (estimates pending integration), U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (estimates pending integration), FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (estimates pending integration). Last updated: 2026-04-25.









