Elevation Certificates in Benton County, WA
An elevation certificate documents the elevation of a structure relative to the Base Flood Elevation assigned by FEMA for that flood zone. Flood insurance companies use it to set premiums, lenders use it to confirm flood insurance compliance, and local floodplain administrators use it to verify that new construction meets floodplain development standards. If you own property near the Columbia River in Kennewick or Richland, or near the Yakima River in West Richland, Benton City, or Prosser, there is a meaningful chance you will need one.
Benton County's two major rivers, the Columbia and the Yakima, create distinct flood risk corridors that affect thousands of properties across the county. Understanding which corridor affects your property, and what the FEMA maps show, is the first step before ordering an elevation certificate.
Benton County Flood Zones
Columbia River Corridor: Kennewick and Richland
The Columbia River defines the southern edge of Kennewick and runs along the eastern side of Richland. Both cities have established flood zone areas along the riverfront. The Columbia River Road corridor in Kennewick, the Clover Island area, and the south Richland riverfront near the Yakima River confluence are among the areas with significant FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area designations. Property owners within several blocks of the Columbia River should check FEMA maps before assuming they are outside the flood zone.
Yakima River Corridor: West Richland, Benton City, and Prosser
The Yakima River flows through western Benton County from the Yakima County border south through Benton City and Prosser before joining the Columbia near Kennewick. The river's flood corridor is mapped through all of these communities. West Richland has several neighborhoods where Yakima River flooding has historically reached residential areas. Benton City and Prosser, smaller communities with older housing stock near the river, have properties that regularly require elevation certificates for insurance and permitting purposes.
Hanford Reach Area
The Hanford Reach National Monument sits in northern Benton County along the Columbia River. Properties at the edges of this area near Richland may intersect with flood zone designations tied to the Columbia River's historic flood range in that reach.
When an Elevation Certificate Is Required
- Purchasing a flood zone property: If the property is in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area, federal law requires flood insurance on any federally backed mortgage. The insurer needs an elevation certificate to calculate the premium accurately.
- Building or adding to a flood zone structure: Benton County floodplain development permits require documentation that new structures or substantial improvements meet elevation standards. An elevation certificate provides that documentation.
- Applying for a LOMA: If your property was mapped into a flood zone but your structure's lowest floor is above the Base Flood Elevation, an elevation certificate is the required documentation to submit a Letter of Map Amendment to FEMA.
- Selling a flood zone property: Buyers and lenders will ask for current flood insurance documentation. Having a recent elevation certificate on hand simplifies the transaction.
- Reducing a high flood insurance premium: Pre-FIRM structures, those built before FEMA maps were established for your area, are rated at a default premium that often exceeds what an actuarial rate based on actual elevation data would produce. An elevation certificate lets the insurer rate the policy on actual elevation, which frequently results in a lower premium.
The Process
A Washington-licensed Professional Land Surveyor visits the property, measures the elevation of the lowest floor and other required reference points using GPS equipment tied to NAVD 88 datum, and completes FEMA Form FF-206-FY-22-152. The completed certificate is signed and sealed by the PLS and submitted to you, your lender, and your insurer as required.
Before ordering, check whether a prior elevation certificate exists for your property. Some properties in the Kennewick and Richland river corridors have certificates on file from prior transactions. A valid prior certificate, completed after the most recent FEMA map revision, may be accepted by your lender and insurer without the cost of a new one.
Cost in Benton County
Most elevation certificates in Benton County cost $350 to $600. Simple riverfront lots on established subdivisions in Kennewick and Richland tend toward the lower end. Properties with access challenges, complex multi-source flood zone designations, or large acreage run higher. Request at least two written quotes and confirm the scope includes site visit, elevation measurements, form completion, and the signed sealed certificate.
Find a Licensed Surveyor for Your Elevation Certificate
Our directory connects you with licensed Washington PLS surveyors serving Benton County. Search Benton County surveyors to find firms that handle elevation certificates in Kennewick, Richland, West Richland, Prosser, and Benton City.