Home / Guides / What is a 100-year flood?
The "100-year" label comes from statistics, not the calendar. It means a flood of that size is expected, on average over a very long period, once per hundred years. But averages hide the year-to-year reality. Each year is an independent roll of the dice with the same 1% chance. Nothing "uses up" the odds after a big flood, so a town can see two so-called 100-year floods within a few years and there is no contradiction. This is why FEMA and the National Weather Service increasingly use "1% annual chance flood" instead. It describes the same event without implying a safe waiting period.
Key takeaway: The clock does not reset your safety. A 100-year flood means a 1% chance every single year, forever, not one flood then a hundred quiet years.
The single-year number sounds small, but floods are a repeated risk. Over the 30-year life of a typical mortgage, the chance of being hit at least once by the 1% flood is about 26%, roughly one in four. That is the reason FEMA draws the high-risk Special Flood Hazard Area line at the 1% flood rather than a rarer event, and the reason flood insurance is mandatory there with a federally-backed loan. The table shows how the cumulative odds build over time for the 1% (100-year) and 0.2% (500-year) floods.
| Time in the home | 1% flood (100-year) | 0.2% flood (500-year) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | 1% | 0.2% |
| 10 years | about 10% | about 2% |
| 30 years (a mortgage) | about 26% | about 6% |
| 50 years | about 39% | about 10% |
The 1% flood is the backbone of the whole map. FEMA's high-risk zones (the A and V families) are defined as the land that would be inundated by the 1%-annual-chance flood, and the base flood elevation is the height that flood is expected to reach. Shaded Zone X covers the wider 0.2%-annual-chance area, the "500-year" band. So when you read your zone, you are really reading which flood probability your land falls inside. For the codes themselves, see flood zone codes explained.
The percentages above assume the odds stay constant, which is how the maps are drawn today. In reality, rainfall patterns and sea levels shift, and FEMA periodically restudies and remaps areas, which can move a property into or out of a zone. That is a good reason to treat your zone as a current snapshot rather than a permanent verdict. For how and why zones change, see do flood zones change.
If a one-in-four chance over your mortgage feels worth insuring against, the next step is knowing your actual zone and what coverage costs. See is flood insurance required and how to lower flood insurance cost. New to this? Start with what is a flood zone, or read our methodology.
Get your address's actual FEMA zone, not a general explainer.