Flood Zone
An area identified by the local council or regional authority as being at risk of flooding, based on historical data and modelling.
What is a Flood Zone?
A flood zone is an area mapped by your regional or district council as being susceptible to flooding. These maps are based on historical flood events, hydrological modelling, and climate change projections. In New Zealand, flood zones are typically shown on council planning maps and referenced in LIM reports.
New Zealand's weather patterns make flooding the country's most common natural hazard. Major flood events in regions like the Bay of Plenty, Hawke's Bay, and Auckland have caused widespread property damage and highlighted the importance of understanding flood risk before buying.
Councils classify flood risk at various return intervals โ for example, a 1-in-100-year flood zone means the area has a 1% chance of flooding in any given year. Properties in flood zones may face building restrictions, higher insurance premiums, or difficulty obtaining insurance altogether. Some areas also have flood management infrastructure like stopbanks or detention dams, which reduce but don't eliminate risk.
Why It Matters for Due Diligence
Flood zone status can dramatically affect insurance costs, resale value, and what you can build. Some insurers refuse to cover flood damage for properties in high-risk zones, and others charge significantly higher premiums.
Always check the LIM report for flood hazard overlays and ask the council about the specific flood return period for the property. If the property is in or near a flood zone, get specialist advice on the actual risk level and consider the long-term implications of climate change on flood frequency.
How to Check
The LIM report will identify whether the property is in a council-mapped flood zone. You can also check your regional council's hazard maps online (most councils publish these through GIS mapping portals). Ask the council about the specific return period and whether any flood mitigation works are planned for the area.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still get insurance for a property in a flood zone?
It depends on the level of risk. Many insurers will still cover properties in flood zones but may exclude flood damage, apply a higher excess, or charge higher premiums. After major flood events, some insurers have withdrawn cover from high-risk areas entirely. Always get insurance quotes before going unconditional.
Does flood zone status affect property value?
Yes. Properties in mapped flood zones typically sell for less than comparable properties outside flood zones. The discount varies depending on the severity of the risk, the history of actual flooding, and the availability of insurance. Buyers should factor this into their offer.
Related Terms
LIM Report
GlossaryA Land Information Memorandum โ an official council report summarising everything the council knows about a property.
Overland Flow Path
GlossaryThe natural or engineered route that stormwater follows over land during heavy rainfall when drainage systems are overwhelmed.
Land Instability
GlossaryThe risk of ground movement including landslides, slope failure, subsidence, and land slippage that can damage buildings and infrastructure.
Coastal Erosion
GlossaryThe gradual loss of land along the coastline caused by wave action, tidal currents, weathering, and rising sea levels.
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