National Flood Insurance Program Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The National Flood Insurance Program Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2025 is a broad NFIP extension and overhaul. It extends NFIP authorities through September 30, 2030 and creates lapse-period funding continuity rules. It caps annual premium increases, creates targeted means-tested assistance for eligible policyholders with household income not more than 140 percent of area median income and high housing and insurance-cost burdens, allows optional monthly premium installments with a fee capped at $15, studies business interruption coverage, updates coverage limits, studies participation rates, and defines Write Your Own companies. The mitigation title sets aside Disaster Relief Fund money for high-risk property mitigation, revises increased-cost-of-compliance coverage, expands flood mitigation assistance grants, creates urban mitigation opportunities, requires Community Rating System regional coordinators, authorizes a mitigation loan pilot, and creates state or tribal revolving loan funds for flood mitigation. Mapping and rate provisions modernize flood maps, create premium-rate appeals, address levee-protected areas, require a premium calculator, and require premium-rate consideration of mitigation projects. Program finance and accountability provisions provide five years of Treasury interest forbearance on NFIP borrowing, cap WYO compensation, increase third-party service-provider transparency, study claims-data sales or licensing, address refusal of mitigation assistance, and treat multiple structures for mitigation surcharges. The claims title fixes earth-movement and engineer standards, covers some pre-FIRM condominium basements, requires remediation guidance, creates an Independent Office for Policyholder Appeals, audits underpayments and overpayments by WYO companies, gives policyholders access to claims documents and technical assistance reports, allows FEMA to terminate problematic WYO service-provider contracts, requires claim determinations within 60 days and payment within 30 days after approval, bars manipulation of engineering reports, trains floodplain managers, agents, and adjusters, requires flood insurance agents to complete three hours of continuing education every two years, reforms proof-of-loss forms, creates an Agent Advisory Council, requires property flood-hazard disclosures before new NFIP coverage, and gives policyholders a 90-day renewal grace period at the renewal offer rate.
Who Benefits and How
NFIP policyholder families benefit from the 2030 reauthorization, capped premium increases, monthly payment option, renewal grace period, claims-document access, appeal rights, and faster claim deadlines. Low-income flood insurance families benefit from means-tested assistance tied to area median income and housing-cost burdens. Flood-prone communities benefit from mitigation grants, state or tribal revolving loan funds, urban mitigation opportunities, and Community Rating System coordination. Homebuyer families benefit from flood-hazard disclosure requirements before new NFIP coverage can be issued for covered property transfers or leases.
Who Bears the Burden and How
FEMA NFIP administrators must implement affordability assistance, mapping modernization, mitigation programs, appeals, claims deadlines, agent training, advisory councils, and disclosure determinations. Write Your Own company claims managers face compensation caps, audits for underpayments or overpayments, third-party cost transparency, contract-termination risk, and claims-handling standards. Flood insurance training providers must support recurring three-hour NFIP continuing education courses for agents. Real estate compliance staff in participating jurisdictions must provide written flood-hazard disclosures before covered property transfers or leases.
Key Provisions
- Extends NFIP authorization through September 30, 2030 and creates lapse-period funding continuity.
- Caps annual premium increases and creates targeted means-tested flood insurance assistance.
- Funds mitigation through high-risk property measures, ICC coverage, grants, urban mitigation, loans, and revolving funds.
- Modernizes mapping, creates premium-rate appeals, addresses levee areas, and requires a premium calculator.
- Strengthens claims accountability through policyholder document rights, appeal offices, claim deadlines, engineer-report protections, WYO audits, agent training, and flood-risk disclosures.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Reauthorizes the National Flood Insurance Program through September 30, 2030 and reforms premiums, means-tested assistance, monthly payments, mitigation grants and loans, mapping, rate appeals, WYO compensation and transparency, claims documents, engineer reports, claim deadlines, agent training, advisory councils, flood-risk disclosures, and renewal grace periods.
Key Policy Areas
Flood Insurance, Disaster Mitigation, Housing
Primary Purpose
Reauthorizes the National Flood Insurance Program through September 30, 2030 and reforms premiums, means-tested assistance, monthly payments, mitigation grants and loans, mapping, rate appeals, WYO compensation and transparency, claims documents, engineer reports, claim deadlines, agent training, advisory councils, flood-risk disclosures, and renewal grace periods.
Policy Domains
Resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- NFIP policyholder families
- Low-income flood insurance families
- Flood-prone communities
- Homebuyer families
- Floodplain managers
- Flood insurance training providers
Identified Costs
- FEMA NFIP administrators
- Write Your Own company claims managers
- Flood insurance training providers
- Real estate compliance staff
- Federal taxpayers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeReferred to the Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings, and …
Mr. Pallone (for himself and Mr. Higgins of Louisiana) introduced …
Referred to the Committee on Financial Services, and in addition …
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Flood insurance training providers, Low-income flood insurance families, NFIP policyholder families
Positive-direction: Low-income flood insurance families, NFIP policyholder families
Negative-direction: Flood insurance training providers, Third-party NFIP contractors, Write Your Own company claims managers
FEMA NFIP administrators, FEMA claims staff, FEMA mapping staff
FEMA NFIP administrators faces effects in multiple directions
Positive-direction: Tribal mitigation offices
Negative-direction: FEMA claims staff, FEMA mapping staff, FEMA mitigation staff
High-risk property owners, Property owners in mapped flood areas, Real estate compliance staff
Positive-direction: High-risk property owners, Property owners in mapped flood areas
Negative-direction: Real estate compliance staff, Repeated flood loss property owners
Floodplain managers, State mitigation offices
Positive-direction: State mitigation offices
Negative-direction: Floodplain managers
Flood-prone communities, Levee-protected communities
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology