The structural limitation of Flood Risk Finder is not a flaw in the tool itself — it is a flaw in the coverage system the tool sits on top of. A federal risk lookup is genuinely useful information. It is also incomplete as a homeowner protection strategy without a corresponding national flood insurance solution, and that solution is not yet operational.
The Insurance Bureau of Canada's 2025 pre-budget submission to the House of Commons finance committee set out the structural numbers: more than 1.5 million Canadian households — about 10% of all residences — sit in known areas of high flood risk and account for roughly 78% of all flood losses, with the top 2% of highest-risk residences alone accounting for 50% of losses.
The federal government committed in Budgets 2023 and 2024 to a CMHC reinsurance subsidiary delivering a low-cost, high-risk National Flood Insurance Program, but as of mid-2024 still required the Fall Economic Statement to fully fund core operations and stand up the entity. Homeowner.ca's reporting on Ottawa's hesitation to launch the national flood insurance program tracks how that gap has persisted into spring 2026.
The numbers from the federal willingness-to-pay study are sharper still. About 5 million of Canada's 15 million homes carry overland flood insurance, but those insured homes are mostly in low-risk areas — accounting for only 5–10% of expected residential flood damage — while very few high or extreme-risk homes are currently insured even though they account for 90–95% of residential flood damage risk. The roughly 1% of homes in extreme-risk areas have about a 50% chance of flooding over the next 10 years and would face premiums in the several-thousand-dollars-per-year range, likely requiring subsidies, elevation, protection, or relocation.
That is the gap Flood Risk Finder helps surface but cannot close. A homeowner who looks up an address and sees "extreme" can now act on that information — confirm coverage, evaluate mitigation, factor it into longer-term decisions. What they cannot yet do is buy affordable, broadly available high-risk overland flood insurance through a federal backstop, because the federal backstop has not yet been built. The risk lookup is a real and overdue improvement; it arrives in front of the coverage program, not behind it.
Until your jurisdiction's data is live in Flood Risk Finder, the most useful preparation is to know your property's flood type by local geography (coastal, riverine, rainfall, or combination), confirm your existing overland flood and sewer backup endorsements in writing, and document your basement's current finished value and contents. All three steps are valuable regardless of what your eventual federal rating turns out to be.