Parcel Risk Report

Flood risk in and around South Lake Tahoe, El Dorado County

FEMA's official flood map draws the 1%-annual-chance floodplain. FEMA's National Risk Index adds a comparative flood-risk rating for every census tract — a broader, neighborhood-scale measure. Here's how the tracts in and around South Lake Tahoe rate, and how to check one address.

3 of 13
census tracts in and around South Lake Tahoe are rated Relatively High or Very High for riverine or coastal flood risk by FEMA's National Risk Index.
Census tracts intersecting South Lake Tahoe13
… rated Relatively High or Very High for flood (riverine or coastal)3

That puts parts of the South Lake Tahoe area among the higher-rated neighborhoods in FEMA's national flood-risk comparison. The National Risk Index rating is a comparative, composite measure (it reflects expected losses and community vulnerability, not just the mapped floodplain), so it complements the official FEMA flood map rather than contradicting it — check a specific address to see the map's call for one property. These are tract-level ratings (neighborhood scale), not parcel-precise and not a count of homes.

Flood-rating breakdown for South Lake Tahoe

Riverine flood — Relatively High3

FEMA rates riverine and coastal flood separately, so one tract can appear in two rows — these rows can therefore add up to more than the 3 elevated tracts above (a tract is "elevated" if either rating is Relatively High or Very High). Categorical classes from FEMA's National Risk Index — never a proprietary score.

Check a specific South Lake Tahoe address

City figures are a starting point. To see what the official FEMA flood map will say for one property in South Lake Tahoe — side by side with these cited federal & state sources — run the free per-address check:

Open the free Beyond-FEMA checker → · See all of El Dorado County →

How this figure is derived (and what it is not)

Other cities in El Dorado County

Placerville