Flooding is the most common and costly natural hazard worldwide, causing over $80 billion in global damages annually. A flood risk assessment evaluates how likely a location is to experience flooding and how severe that flooding could be. Organizations use these assessments to screen real estate portfolios, evaluate supply chain exposure, and meet regulatory disclosure requirements under frameworks like TCFD.
Flood risk assessment covers three distinct flood types, each driven by different mechanisms and requiring different data. Understanding these types and the methods used to quantify them is the foundation of any location-level risk analysis.
What Is Flood Risk Assessment?
A flood risk assessment is a systematic evaluation of flood likelihood, severity, and potential impact at a specific location. It combines climate data, terrain analysis, and historical flood records to produce a risk rating that organizations can act on.
The assessment answers three core questions: What type of flooding could affect this location? How likely is flooding under current and future climate conditions? How severe would the impact be based on local geography and elevation?
Modern flood risk assessments go beyond historical flood maps. They incorporate climate model projections from CMIP6 to estimate how climate hazards like extreme precipitation will change through 2030, 2040, and 2050 under different emission scenarios.
Types of Flood Risk: Fluvial, Pluvial, and Coastal
Flood risk falls into three categories based on the source of water and the mechanism that causes flooding. Each type requires different data inputs and assessment methods.
| Attribute | Fluvial (River) | Pluvial (Surface Water) | Coastal (Storm Surge) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Rivers and streams overflowing banks | Rainfall exceeding drainage capacity | Sea level surge from storms or tides |
| Trigger | Sustained heavy rainfall upstream | Intense localized rainfall | Tropical cyclones, high tides, sea level rise |
| Key Data | River discharge, precipitation, terrain slope | Rainfall intensity, soil permeability, urban drainage | Elevation, sea level projections, tidal range |
| Warning Time | Hours to days | Minutes to hours | Hours to days |
| Geographic Scope | River floodplains and valleys | Any location, especially urban | Coastal zones within tidal reach |
Fluvial flooding is the most widely assessed type. It occurs when sustained rainfall upstream causes river discharge to exceed channel capacity. The risk depends heavily on terrain: flat areas near rivers face much higher exposure than hillside locations. For a detailed breakdown of the differences, see our guide to fluvial vs pluvial flood risk.
Pluvial flooding is harder to predict because it can happen anywhere rainfall overwhelms local drainage. Urban areas with impermeable surfaces are particularly vulnerable, making pluvial flood risk a growing concern for commercial real estate, where flood damage varies significantly by building type.
Coastal flooding combines sea level rise with storm surge. Locations within a few meters of current sea level face compounding risk as baseline sea levels continue to rise under all emission scenarios.

How Flood Risk Is Assessed
Flood risk assessment methods combine climate projections with geospatial data to produce location-specific risk scores. The process varies by flood type, but all methods share a common framework: identify the hazard driver, quantify exposure at the location, and rate severity.
River Flood Assessment
River flood risk starts with precipitation data from climate models. A baseline of approximately 18 heavy precipitation days per year is established from historical records. Climate projections from CMIP6 models then estimate how this frequency changes under SSP2-4.5 (moderate emissions) and SSP5-8.5 (high emissions) scenarios.
Terrain susceptibility is a critical modifier. A flat location near a river (slope of 2 degrees or less) receives a susceptibility factor of 1.0, meaning full exposure to modeled flood frequency. Gentle slopes (2 to 8 degrees) reduce exposure to 0.7, hilly terrain (8 to 16 degrees) to 0.4, and mountainous areas (above 16 degrees) to 0.2.
The final risk score combines projected precipitation frequency with the terrain factor and applies a 2.5x amplification for river discharge. The Clausius-Clapeyron relationship shows that a 7% increase in atmospheric moisture per degree of warming translates to roughly 2.5 times the increase in peak river discharge.
| Risk Rating | Flood Days per Year |
|---|---|
| Low | Fewer than 5 |
| Moderate | 5 to 10 |
| High | 10 to 20 |
| Severe | 20 to 40 |
| Extreme | More than 40 |
Coastal Flood Assessment
Coastal flood risk assessment uses elevation data and sea level rise projections. The key metric is freeboard: the vertical distance between a location’s elevation and the projected sea level plus a tidal buffer. Locations with negative freeboard face direct inundation risk.

Flood Risk and Climate Change
Climate change is increasing flood risk across all three types. Warmer air holds more moisture, which increases the frequency and intensity of extreme rainfall events that drive both fluvial and pluvial flooding.
For every 1 degree Celsius of warming, atmospheric moisture capacity increases by approximately 7%. When this additional moisture falls as precipitation, the effect on river discharge is amplified. Studies show that peak river flows increase at roughly 2.5 times the rate of precipitation increases due to soil saturation thresholds and runoff dynamics.
Under SSP5-8.5 (high emissions), extreme precipitation days are projected to increase by 20% to 40% in many regions by 2050. Locations currently rated as moderate flood risk may shift to high or severe risk within two to three decades.
Coastal flood risk compounds because sea level rise is essentially permanent on human timescales. IPCC AR6 sea level rise projections show median rise of 0.25 to 0.40 meters by 2050 across scenarios. Combined with storm surge events, this reduces freeboard margins for thousands of coastal facilities and infrastructure assets, making property risk assessment at the building level increasingly critical.

Flood Risk Data Sources
Accurate flood risk assessment depends on high-quality data from multiple sources. The table below summarizes the most widely used datasets for each flood type.
| Data Source | Coverage | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| FEMA Flood Maps | United States | Regulatory flood zones, insurance requirements |
| UK Environment Agency | England | River, surface water, and coastal flood risk |
| CMIP6 Climate Models | Global | Future precipitation projections under SSP scenarios |
| IPCC AR6 | Global | Sea level rise projections, extreme event attribution |
| NASA SRTM / Copernicus DEM | Global | Elevation and terrain analysis for susceptibility |
| NOAA National Weather Service | United States | Real-time flood warnings, river gauge data, historical flood records |

For organizations assessing flood risk across hundreds of locations, climate risk databases that combine these sources into a single API or platform reduce the complexity of sourcing and normalizing data from multiple providers. For planned developments in flood-prone areas, a strategic flood risk assessment evaluates site suitability.
How to Assess Flood Risk for Your Locations
Running a flood risk assessment across a portfolio of locations follows a structured workflow. Whether you are screening 10 sites or 10,000, the steps remain the same.
Step 1: Geocode your locations. Convert addresses or site names to latitude and longitude coordinates. Accurate geocoding is essential because flood risk can vary significantly within a few hundred meters.
Step 2: Query flood hazard data. For each coordinate, pull precipitation projections, terrain slope data, and elevation. River flood assessments need proximity to waterways and upstream catchment characteristics.
Step 3: Score each location. Apply hazard-specific risk models that combine climate projections with local geography. The output is a risk rating (Low through Extreme) for each flood type at each time horizon.
Step 4: Compare across scenarios. Run the assessment under both SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 to understand the range of outcomes. Locations that shift from moderate to severe risk under high emissions are priority candidates for adaptation planning.
Step 5: Prioritize and act. Rank locations by composite flood risk score. High-risk sites may need detailed engineering assessments, insurance review, or relocation analysis. Calculating the probable maximum loss for each location helps quantify worst-case financial exposure. Continuuiti’s climate risk assessment platform automates steps 2 through 4 across all three flood types for any location globally.
For organizations reporting under TCFD, the physical climate risk assessment output maps directly to the required scenario analysis disclosures.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a flood risk assessment?
A flood risk assessment is a systematic evaluation of how likely a location is to experience flooding and how severe that flooding could be. It analyzes three flood types (fluvial, pluvial, and coastal) using climate data, terrain analysis, and historical records to produce a risk rating.
Why is a flood risk assessment important?
Flood risk assessment helps organizations identify vulnerable locations before damage occurs. It supports insurance decisions, regulatory compliance under TCFD and CDP, real estate due diligence, and supply chain resilience planning. Flooding causes over $80 billion in global damages annually, making proactive assessment a financial priority.
What is the difference between fluvial and pluvial flooding?
Fluvial flooding occurs when rivers or streams overflow their banks due to sustained heavy rainfall upstream. Pluvial flooding happens when intense localized rainfall overwhelms drainage systems, causing surface water accumulation. Fluvial flooding follows river channels while pluvial flooding can occur anywhere, particularly in urban areas with impermeable surfaces.
How much does a flood risk assessment cost?
Costs vary widely depending on scope and method. A desktop-level screening using climate models and elevation data typically costs $200 to $500 per location. Detailed engineering assessments with site surveys can range from $5,000 to $50,000 per site. Automated platforms that screen hundreds of locations at once significantly reduce per-location costs.
How does climate change affect flood risk?
Climate change increases flood risk through three mechanisms. Warmer air holds 7% more moisture per degree of warming, intensifying rainfall. Peak river discharge increases at roughly 2.5 times the rate of precipitation increases. Sea level rise permanently reduces coastal freeboard margins. Under high-emission scenarios, extreme precipitation days may increase 20% to 40% by 2050.
How do you assess flood risk for a property?
To assess flood risk for a property, follow five steps: geocode the address to precise coordinates, query flood hazard data (precipitation projections, terrain slope, elevation), score the location using hazard-specific risk models, compare results across SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 climate scenarios, and prioritize based on the composite risk rating for fluvial, pluvial, and coastal flood types.
Conclusion
Flood risk assessment provides the data organizations need to understand and manage flood exposure across their locations. By evaluating fluvial, pluvial, and coastal flood risk under current and projected climate conditions, teams can prioritize adaptation spending, satisfy disclosure requirements, and make informed decisions about where to invest, build, and operate.
