Rising Seas Threaten Coastal Homes to the Tune of $882B

August 3, 2016 by

When talking about housing, “underwater” usually means you owe more on a mortgage than the home is actually worth. If climate change continues apace, that term could take on a much more literal meaning.

Rising sea levels could soak homeowners for $882 billion, according to a new report from real estate website Zillow. The research takes its initial cue from the journal Nature, which in March found sea levels could rise more than 6 feet by the end of the century. In that scenario, Florida could lose close to 1 million homes, or 13 percent of the state’s current stock. That comes out to $400 billion in value—a figure that doesn’t include losses to commercial buildings or public infrastructure or account for future appreciation in home value.

Zillow combined its own home price estimates with sea level projections from the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration. There’s still a lot of guesswork going on, cautions Zillow Chief Economist Svenja Gudell. Governments could build barriers to protect coastal communities or sea level rise could prove more moderate. But whatever the variables, there will be major losses as the waters move in.

Even in Zillow’s less calamitous scenario of a 2-foot increase in sea level, the U.S. would still lose $74 billion in home value, with Florida leading the way at $17 billion.

The total value of the losses, meanwhile, is determined by the number of homes at risk of flooding and the value of those homes. In the more catastrophic 6-foot-rise scenario, New York City would lose about 32,000 homes at $27 billion in value. Newport Beach, Calif., meanwhile, would lose one-sixth as many homes but $10 billion in value, because median home value there is $1.6 million.

Homebuyers have proven to be a stubborn bunch when it comes to building and buying homes in coastal areas. Still, the year 2100 isn’t that far away. If you’re on the market for oceanfront real estate, you might want to find a beach that’s on high ground. Or better yet, consider the Great Lakes.