Flood Risk in Cumberland County
Cumberland County has one of the most serious flood histories of any inland county in North Carolina. The Cape Fear River runs through the heart of Fayetteville, and the county's flat, low terrain gives floodwaters few places to go when the river rises. Three major hurricanes brought catastrophic flooding to the county in a span of 19 years: Floyd in 1999, Matthew in 2016, and Florence in 2018.
Florence, which stalled over North Carolina in September 2018, was particularly devastating for Cumberland County. The Cape Fear River at Fayetteville crested at its highest level in recorded history. Thousands of properties flooded. Many that had never seen water before were inundated.
FEMA has updated its flood maps for Cumberland County multiple times in response to this history. A substantial portion of Fayetteville, Hope Mills, Spring Lake, and the unincorporated communities along the river corridor are mapped in AE flood zones, which carry the federal flood insurance mandate for properties with federally backed loans.
What Is an Elevation Certificate
An elevation certificate is a standardized FEMA document completed by a licensed Professional Land Surveyor or registered engineer. It records the elevation of a building's lowest floor, the grade around the structure, and other key elevation data, then compares those measurements to the Base Flood Elevation (BFE) shown on the current FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map.
Lenders require it to confirm flood insurance is in place. Flood insurance providers require it to rate the policy accurately based on the building's actual exposure.
When You Need an Elevation Certificate in Cumberland County
Federally Backed Mortgage on a Flood Zone Property
If your parcel falls in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area (AE or AO zone) and you are using a conventional loan backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, an FHA loan, a VA loan, or any other federally regulated loan, the lender must require flood insurance as a condition of the mortgage. The flood insurance policy requires an elevation certificate. This is the most common reason buyers in flood-prone parts of Fayetteville obtain elevation certificates.
Military and VA Loan Buyers Near Fort Liberty
Fort Liberty sits in Cumberland County, and the military community represents a large share of the local real estate market. Service members buying near Hope Mills, Spring Lake, and parts of Fayetteville on VA loans frequently encounter flood zone properties because of the Cape Fear floodplain geography. If you are using a VA loan and the property is near any of the county's flood-prone waterways, budget for an elevation certificate from the start.
Applying for a LOMA
After Florence and other flood events, FEMA revised flood maps to expand AE zones in Cumberland County. Some properties were newly included in flood zones despite having land that physically sits above the base flood elevation. If you believe your property was incorrectly mapped, you can apply for a Letter of Map Amendment (LOMA) to remove it. A LOMA application requires an elevation certificate documenting your property's actual elevation relative to the BFE.
Existing Properties Changing Ownership
If you are buying a property in a Cumberland County flood zone from a previous owner, check whether there is an existing elevation certificate on file. If the property has been mapped in the same flood zone since the certificate was issued and no major changes to the structure or grade have occurred, the existing certificate may be valid. Confirm with your lender and insurer before assuming you need a new one.
Cost: $280 to $580 in 2026
A standard elevation certificate in Cumberland County costs $280 to $580 in 2026. Factors that affect pricing include:
- Property complexity: A single-story home on a clear lot is faster to measure than a property with split-level construction, a crawl space, or complex grade changes.
- Surveyor familiarity with the area: Firms that regularly work along the Cape Fear River corridor price their Cape Fear flood zone work more accurately and efficiently.
- Combining with another survey: If you also need a boundary survey, ordering both from the same firm saves a mobilization fee.
The Process
Contact a licensed North Carolina PLS and provide your property address. The surveyor visits the site, measures the critical elevation points, and returns to the office to complete the FEMA form. Turnaround time for a standard elevation certificate in Cumberland County is typically 1 to 2 weeks. Have the completed certificate ready for your lender and flood insurance provider.
Verify any surveyor's NCBELS license at ncbels.org before hiring. Only a licensed PLS or registered engineer can certify a FEMA elevation certificate in North Carolina.
Search the Cumberland County land surveyor directory to find licensed surveyors who prepare elevation certificates in the Fayetteville area.