Beachfront dream, billionaire budget: Flood insurance pricing SC buyers from paradise
His current home, where he’s lived for the last three years, sits on the west side of the marsh in a high-risk flood zone.
The home built in 1976 never had a history of flooding. He expected to pay for flood insurance as required by his mortgage company, but he didn’t anticipate it to eat away at the money he had set aside for home improvements.
Since 2023, his annual insurance rate has more than doubled. He now pays
Like many who long to have a home along the beach, Barber has no choice but to pay the spiking premiums if he wants to stay in his house. But what many homeowners find is that “it’s not sustainable,” Barber said.
Flood insurance has increasingly become a luxury for coastal residents.
As researchers continue to warn about increased severe weather events, insurance companies are raising rates to better reflect the risk. This leaves coastal home buyers deciding whether to rack up thousands of dollars in insurance premiums or risk losing their dream home by foregoing protection.
And with more and more people continuing to move to areas like
Residents ultimately have to weigh the costs of having a coastal lifestyle. Are coastal residents dropping their flood insurance?
Hilton Head’s legacy flood maps from 1986 showed 75% of the island was in a high-risk flood zone. In 2021 when FEMA redrew the maps, the land area located in a high-risk zone plummeted to only 25%.
Mendrick asked what had changed and how she was supposed to convince residents to keep their policies, but she was left with no concrete answer.
The island had roughly 23,700 National Flood Insurance Program policies in force in
Between 2024 and 2025,
Specific policy data for coastal municipalities from 2024 was unavailable at the time of publication due to the government’s partial shutdown affecting FEMA’s ability to respond to requests.
“Two-thousand to
It wasn’t the price of the villa that deterred them from buying, but the drastic cost of insurance that surprised them. Their Realtor told them it would have equaled close to
“It’s essentially another mortgage payment,” Christiansen said.
They chose a home outside a flood zone, because they did not want to incur other expenses that they didn’t think would pay off, especially since they wouldn’t live there the whole year.
But insurance agents and Realtors have argued that floods can happen anywhere, regardless of flood zone. According to FEMA, in the last 10 years nearly a third of claims came from outside a high-risk zone. What does flood insurance cover, and why have premiums increased?
Flood insurance is required for homes in a Special
The NFIP, operated by FEMA, has historically offered government subsidized flood insurance policies for property owners, renters and businesses aiming to reduce the financial risk of flooding by requiring strict floodplain management standards.
The NFIP covers up to
Flood insurance premiums used to be based on what flood zone a home was located in and the elevation of the property. Until 2021, homes in the same type of flood zone paid similar premiums because specific characteristics like types of flooding, flood frequency and distance to a water source were not considered. Since then, FEMA has assessed homes based on a new model, called Risk Rating 2.0.
The NFIP owed
“Previously, some policyholders with lower-value homes paid more than their actual risk warranted, while those with higher-value homes often paid less,” a FEMA spokesperson said. “While some policyholders experienced premium increases, hundreds of thousands of single-family homeowners are now paying less than they did under the legacy system.”
In 2024,
FEMA data indicated the average annual payment in
NFIP policies in force prior to 2021, when Risk Rating 2.0 began, are on a glide path. For policy rates that increased, premiums will continue climbing up to 18% to 25% a year until they reach their full, risk-based rate.
“If this is your forever home, you need to look at what the cost of flood insurance is going to be,” she said.
Private flood insurers do not have a cap on price increases and can raise prices as they see fit. Sherrard said some policyholders switch back to the NFIP after realizing the frequent jumps. She has also seen policyholders cancel their flood insurance after paying their mortgage to shake the extra cost, but she worries those policyholders don’t fully understand the risk. Residents are paying the price (literally) of living in coastal flood zones
She has remodeled the first floor of her home to reduce flood damage. She even began storing her furniture off the property during certain months of the year, but since doing so she hasn’t had a flood.
Her options to avoid the high price have dwindled down to cancelling her policy and risking costlier flood damage, or moving off the inlet.
“I don’t want to do that,” she said. “It’s worth the gamble.”
But other residents who haven’t experienced flooding are frustrated by the continually increasing premiums.
In
While his premium is not as high as others’, now just under
“It slowly eats away at you,” he said.
He said even if he did have flood damage, he wouldn’t file a claim unless it was catastrophic to avoid paying even higher premiums. Regardless, he understands that he either pays for the policy, whatever it may end up costing, or he can’t live there anymore without owning the home. What is the coast’s true flood risk?
While FEMA maps and flood insurance rely on historical data to determine risk,
Communities like
Nearly 150,000 properties within
Both
Across the four counties, over 200,000 properties are at risk of flooding in the next 30 years — more than the number of FEMA flood insurance policies in the entire state.
During Hurricane Florence in 2018, nearly 26,000 properties were impacted by flooding in the four counties. Hurricane Matthew damaged more than 27,500 properties in 2016.
According to South Carolina’s resilience and risk reduction plan completed in 2023, the low-lying nature of the state’s coastlines makes them more prone to compound flooding, or a combination of extreme tides, storm surge, heavy rainfall or riverine flooding.
In these areas, major damage is often associated with high tide flooding, which has increased in the
There are some benefits already in place to help residents lower their NFIP insurance premiums.
Communities participating in the NFIP can qualify for flood insurance discounts through the Community Rating System, which reflect the area’s flood plain management practices that exceed minimum requirements.
Each community has a score of 1-10, with 1 having the highest discount and 10 having none.
Individual municipalities sometimes vary from the county. Surfside Beach’s score is 7, while
However, these discounts do not apply to private insurance policies. And some structures, those of higher value or subject to repetitive flooding, benefit from private insurance.
Barber said with the type of loan he had when he bought his home in
Barber recently refinanced his home to lower his monthly mortgage payment and adjust for the increasing insurance costs. He had always planned to re-mortgage since the interest rates were high when he bought the house, but he didn’t predict the demanding upkeep with flood insurance. He told his loan broker it had to work, or else he didn’t know if he could stay.
“It was pushing my budget to an uncomfortable level, so we were kind of at the breaking point,” he said. “Could insurance still continue to go up and three years from now, find myself right back where I was? Potentially, but I guess we’ll cross that bridge when we get there.
“I feel for people that have a tighter budget than I do, because I don’t see how their doing it frankly,” Barber said.
In some cases, private insurers can offer better premiums, typically in low-risk flood zones, but in other cases premiums grow to be unaffordable. It has left residents to decide what their budget can handle, and at some point, the only people who will be able to live on the coast are those who can pull the money together comfortably.
“I’d really like to stay,” Barber said. “I’d hate to feel that I was forced out by insurance.”
© 2026 The Sun News (Myrtle Beach, S.C.). Visit www.thesunnews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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