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Here’s What Every Condo Board Needs to Know

May 13, 20252 min read

Are Your Elevators Really Covered by Flood Insurance? Here’s What Every Condo Board Needs to Know

Most condo boards assume their elevators are protected under their flood policy — after all, they’re a critical part of the building. But under the NFIP, that’s not always the case.

Here’s the truth:
If your elevator system is located below the lowest elevated floor, you could be exposed to a major gap in coverage.

Let’s break it down so your board can make confident, informed decisions before the next flood — not after.


📘 What the NFIP Policy Actually Says

Both the NFIP Dwelling Form and General Property Form include coverage for elevators — but there’s a major limitation.

Under Section IV – Property Not Covered, the policy states:

“We do not cover the following property located in, on, or over water, or located below the lowest elevated floor of an elevated Post-FIRM building:... elevators and related equipment.”

In plain terms?
If your building was constructed after the community’s Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) was adopted (Post-FIRM), and it’s located in a Special Flood Hazard Area (SFHA), elevators below the lowest elevated floor are excluded.

That’s not a maybe. That’s policy.


🔎 What This Means for Condo Associations

Most mid- to high-rise condos in flood zones have elevators that service ground-level or below-grade areas — like garages, lobbies, or basements.

If those systems are below the “lowest elevated floor” as defined by FEMA, your policy may not cover damage to:

  • Elevator cabs

  • Motors and control panels

  • Shaft infrastructure

  • Safety systems

And that could mean tens (or hundreds) of thousands in uninsured damage after a flood.


💡 Empowered Boards Ask the Right Questions

Here’s what proactive boards are doing to make sure their elevators — and their budgets — are protected:

Check your elevation certificate
Know exactly where your lowest elevated floor is, and where the elevator equipment is located relative to it.

Review your flood policy with a specialist
An agent may sell you the policy, but it takes someone who understands how FEMA interprets coverage to spot gaps early.

Explore private flood options
Some private policies offer broader mechanical coverage than NFIP — especially for critical systems like elevators.

Have a pre-flood review annually
Flood risk evolves. So should your protection.


You Don’t Need to Panic — You Just Need a Plan

The good news? You’re not stuck guessing.
With the right guidance, you can move from uncertainty to clarity — and make sure your elevator systems are either covered or planned for.


💬 Want help reviewing your building’s coverage before the next flood hits?
👉 Book a free consultation and let’s make sure your elevator — and everything else — is flood-ready. [Schedule Your Call Here]

blog author image

Vance E. Shimley

NFIP Policy & Flood Claim Expert | Condo & Commercial Complex Claims Expert

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