The Acreage, FL Hurricane & Climate Risk Profile

The primary drivers of climate-related financial risk in The Acreage, FL are Hurricane, Inland Flooding, and Cold Wave. This area also faces an unusually high intensity for Wildfire compared to national averages. Based on recent federal data, homeowners in this market face an estimated average annual insurance premium of $4,295, with a local policy non-renewal rate of 0.2%.

City Risk Scorecard
Physical Resilience53/100

Based on FEMA EAL and hazard intensity.

Insurance Stability
Market Stable

Metrics indicate a balanced risk-to-premium environment with standard renewal rates.

Spatial Analysis

Flood Plain Analysis

Localized Flood Dynamics in The Acreage

FEMA Flood Maps for The Acreage identify the "100-year" and "500-year" floodplains (1% and 0.2% annual chance), but modern climate risk analysis suggests that nearly 25% of flood insurance claims originate from properties outside of these designated high-risk zones.

Use the map above to better understand risk by looking at both the FEMA flood plain maps and FEMA Risk Inventory maps by census tract. Standard FEMA maps may not account for 'flash flooding' from intense rain events.
FEMA Designation vs. Reality
Very High
Relative Vulnerability
$8,979,964
Annualized Property Exposure

Insurance Market & Climate Stress Analysis

Current Avg. Premium (2022)

$4,295
Latest Market Rate

Recent Year Change

+-10.1%
YoY Increase

2030 Forecast

$3,127
Based on -3.89% CAGR

Market Retreat (Non-Renewals)

0.19%

Higher rates indicate insurers are actively reducing exposure to The Acreage due to climate-linked risk.

Underwriting Stress (Loss Ratio)

32.3%

A ratio over 70% suggests insurers are paying out nearly all premiums as claims, forcing future price hikes.

Historical Market Trends

Toggle series below to compare costs vs. market stress indicators

Historical Trends & Forecasting

Compare premium costs against underlying risk factors.

Primary Risks

Hurricane

$15,467,955

Expected Annual Loss for The Acreage

90.4Score

Very High compared to US average

Inland Flooding

$8,979,964

Expected Annual Loss for The Acreage

29.0Score

Very High compared to US average

Cold Wave

$4,011,490

Expected Annual Loss for The Acreage

27.3Score

Very High compared to US average

Financial Risk Inventory

MAJOR DRIVER
Hurricane
$15,467,955
Score: 90.4
MAJOR DRIVER
Inland Flooding
$8,979,964
Score: 29.0
MAJOR DRIVER
Cold Wave
$4,011,490
Score: 27.3
Drought
$1,186,048
Score: 26.1
Heat Wave
$319,543
Score: 40.2
UNUSUALLY HIGH
Wildfire
$277,680
Score: 80.3
Lightning
$234,515
Score: 68.4
Tornado
$226,057
Score: 31.2
Strong Wind
$75,493
Score: 26.1
Hail
$45,661
Score: 14.6
Landslide
$3,790
Score: 49.4
Earthquake
$2,523
Score: 1.8

Recommended Mitigation Strategies

Recommended investments to protect your property value and reduce insurance liability based on your local risk profile.

🌀High Investment

Hurricane Mitigation

Install permanent hurricane shutters or upgrade to impact-resistant windows.

Risk Score: 90.4
🔥Low Investment

Wildfire Mitigation

Create a 5ft 'non-combustible' zone around your home using gravel or pavers instead of mulch.

Risk Score: 80.3
🏠Low Investment

Lightning Mitigation

General property maintenance and insurance review recommended.

Risk Score: 68.4

Sources and Methodology

Spatial Climate Risk Modeling

The Expected Annual Loss (EAL) and hazard risk scores are derived from the FEMA NRI zip code dataset using a population-weighted spatial join. Because Zip Codes and Census Tracts do not share perfectly aligned boundaries, we utilize US Census Block Group population centroids to identify where residents actually live.

Financial & Insurance Metrics

The pysical resilence score is calculated by synthesizing Expected Annual Loss (EAL) against the total building replacement value within a jurisdiction. This creates a "Loss Ratio" that measures physical resilience. We supplement this with ZIP-code level data from the U.S. Treasury's Federal Insurance Office (FIO), monitoring trends in premium growth, loss ratios, and policy non-renewals to identify emerging "Insurance Deserts."

Primary Data Sources

Nearby Cities

Zip Codes in The Acreage