Shanan Spearing, Rubicon Flood Control: Think Florida Just Got a Big Slice of FEMA’s Funding Pie? Think Again

News just announced that FEMA awarded $19 million to several states for flood mitigation. Florida got $2.3 million. It sounds like a lot. But is it really? Let’s take a dive under the murky floodwaters of Florida’s need for flood protection.

(PRUnderground) April 27th, 2026

The Scale of Florida’s Flood Problem

Florida is one of the most flood-prone states in the country. There are a few reasons:

  • Long coastline exposed to storm surge
  • Heavy rainfall and hurricanes
  • High water table that slows drainage

The numbers tell the story:

  • Over 2 million flood insurance policies in Florida
  • More than 448,000 flood claims filed since 1978
  • About $19.2 billion paid out in flood losses

And this is not slowing down. Florida has faced 90+ billion-dollar disasters since 1980.

This is not a future risk. This is already happening.

What Florida Already Spends

Florida has been investing heavily in flood mitigation, but the scale is still small compared to risk.

  • The state’s Resilient Florida program has committed over $1.5 billion in flood and resilience projects since 2021
  • It runs at roughly $100–200 million per year in funding for planning and projects
  • FEMA flood mitigation grants across the country are typically in the hundreds of millions per year total, spread across all states

Florida alone is a multi-billion-dollar problem inside a national funding system. Studies show that:

  • Every $1 spent on flood mitigation reduces about $2 to $3 in future damage on average
  • In high-value property protection projects, benefits can reach up to $8 saved per $1 spent in the best cases

If you want to prevent billions in damage, you don’t spend millions. You spend tens of billions.

So How Much Does Florida Actually “Need”?

If we translate risk into prevention cost, there are 3 realistic levels:

To keep things from getting worse

  • Rough estimate: $2–5 billion over a decade
  • Focus: drainage, pumps, seawalls, elevating critical infrastructure

This is what most states aim for but still falls short of long-term resilience.

To reduce repeat damage and insurance pressure

  • Rough estimate: $10–25 billion over 10–15 years
  • Includes: home elevation programs, stormwater overhaul, coastal barriers, buyouts in high-risk zones

True long-term adaptation level

This is “actually match climate and coastal reality”

  • Rough estimate: $50–100+ billion over decades
  • Includes: large-scale relocation of vulnerable infrastructure, full coastal redesign, systemic water management changes

This is the scale implied when experts talk about “resilient coastlines.” Florida is currently funding at the hundreds of millions per year level, while its exposure is in the tens to hundreds of billions over time.

That gap is the story. So when you see:

  • $19 million FEMA announcement
  • $2.3 million for Florida (Six homes elevated)

That’s not the solution. That’s a drop inside a system that is still catching up to the size of the water.

The Cost of Doing Nothing – For You

It’s clear that considering these small-scale funding, Florida will never cat up with its flood mitigation. You are on your own. Property owners who understand this and the risk are not waiting. They are taking steps like:

  • Elevating homes where possible
  • Improving drainage around the property
  • Installing physical flood barriers
  • Reviewing their actual flood exposure, not just insurance coverage

These actions don’t eliminate risk completely. But they reduce impact. And over time, that difference becomes everything.

The Next Best Thing You Can Do for Your Flood Protection

Call Rubicon for an aluminum flood panel quote. It costs nothing to ask. Our goal is to help property owners understand their options and prepare for flooding with clarity and confidence. Contact us today at (239) 330-8888 or email info@rubiconflood.com. We are happy to answer any questions and advice if aluminum flood barriers are the right choice for your flood protection.

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Name: Shanan Spearing
Phone: 2393308888
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Original Press Release.