Alabama flood insurance from NFIP and private carriers. State NFIP average ~$928/yr. Storm-surge, river, and flash-flood protection. Free quotes from TCDS.
TCDS Insurance Agency helps Alabama homeowners and renters protect against the one peril a standard home policy never covers: flooding. We write both NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) policies and private flood coverage, and we compare the two so you get the right limits at the better price for your home.
Flood risk in Alabama comes from two directions. Along the Gulf Coast — Mobile and Baldwin counties — hurricane storm surge is the dominant threat, and it is covered only by a flood policy, never by home or wind insurance. Inland, the Alabama, Coosa, Tombigbee, and Black Warrior river basins drive river and flash flooding that reaches communities well outside the obvious flood zones. Nationally, about a quarter of NFIP claims come from properties in lower-risk areas — which is why flood coverage is worth considering even if your mortgage lender does not require it.
This page explains what flood insurance costs in Alabama, how NFIP and private flood differ, and the timing rules that catch many homeowners off guard.
The NFIP is the federal program most lenders accept; it offers standardized coverage with building and contents limits. Private flood carriers such as Neptune and Wright also write in Alabama and can offer higher limits, faster effective dates, or lower premiums for some homes. Neither is automatically better — the right choice depends on your flood zone, elevation, and how much coverage you need. TCDS compares both in one place.
Standard NFIP flood policies carry a 30-day waiting period before coverage takes effect, so flood insurance must be purchased well before a storm appears in the forecast — you cannot buy it as a hurricane approaches. Some private flood policies have shorter waiting periods, another reason to compare your options early.
For broader coverage context, see how flood interacts with other policies in our water backup vs flood guide.
The average Alabama flood insurance premium is about $928/year for an NFIP policy in Alabama; private flood carriers (Neptune, Wright, and others) also write in the state and can be more competitive for some homes. Source: NerdWallet (FEMA NFIP data). Your own rate depends on coverage limits, location, and risk profile — TCDS compares 50+ carriers to find your lowest eligible rate.
| Carrier | State | Line |
|---|---|---|
| Travelers | Alabama | flood |
| Nationwide | Alabama | flood |
| Auto-Owners | Alabama | flood |
TCDS is an independent agency representing the carriers above and others; we shop all of them in one application. Appointment lineups change — ask us who is writing Alabama flood today.
See the full Alabama insurance guide.
Part of: Flood Insurance
The average NFIP flood policy in Alabama costs about $928 per year (source: NerdWallet, using FEMA NFIP data). Private flood carriers such as Neptune and Wright also write in Alabama and can be more competitive for some homes. Your premium depends on flood zone, elevation, and coverage amount.
Flood insurance is required by mortgage lenders for homes in FEMA high-risk flood zones (Special Flood Hazard Areas). It is optional elsewhere but worth considering, since roughly a quarter of NFIP claims nationally come from outside high-risk zones. Home insurance never covers flood damage.
No. Standard Alabama homeowners policies exclude flood and rising-water damage entirely. Flood coverage requires a separate NFIP or private flood policy. Gulf-Coast storm surge in Mobile and Baldwin counties is only covered by flood insurance, not by home or wind policies.
Standard NFIP flood policies have a 30-day waiting period before coverage begins, so flood insurance must be purchased well before a storm is in the forecast. Some private flood policies have shorter waiting periods — TCDS can compare both.
It depends on your home. NFIP offers standardized federal coverage; private flood carriers can offer higher limits, faster effective dates, or lower premiums for some properties. TCDS compares NFIP and private flood options so you can choose the better fit.