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Risk Index · Allegheny County · pop 1.2M

Pittsburgh, PA real-estate risk

98.1
/100 · Relatively High

Pittsburgh, PA (Allegheny County) carries a FEMA National Risk Index score of 98.1/100 — rated "Relatively High" — driven mainly by riverine flood and strong wind, with roughly $354M in expected natural-hazard losses per year (FEMA NRI, 2025).

Hazard scores (0–100)

Riverine flood
99.2
Strong wind
96.3
Heat wave
94.3
Tornado
91.2
Earthquake
87.9
Hurricane
75.9
Wildfire
60.4
Hail
31.3

Expected annual loss

$354M/yr

all natural hazards, county-wide

Buildings-only loss

$299M/yr

the part that hits owners + insurers

What it means for insurance

Severe convective storms (tornado/hail) drive the insurance cost here — wind/hail deductibles and roof age are what underwriters price, and what's been pushing Midwest/Plains premiums up.

Pittsburgh risk — FAQ

Is Pittsburgh, PA a high-risk area for real estate?

Pittsburgh scores 98.1/100 on FEMA's National Risk Index — rated "Relatively High" versus all US counties. Its expected natural-hazard loss is about $354M per year.

What is the biggest natural hazard in Pittsburgh?

The highest-rated hazard is riverine flood (99.2/100), followed by strong wind (96.3/100).

How does hazard risk affect property insurance in Pittsburgh?

Severe convective storms (tornado/hail) drive the insurance cost here — wind/hail deductibles and roof age are what underwriters price, and what's been pushing Midwest/Plains premiums up.

Scan a Pittsburgh property — free

Drop in any Pittsburghaddress and PropHunt's AI pulls the cap rate, comps, permit history and the full hazard/insurance read — no card required.

Source: FEMA National Risk Index (Counties), v1.20 (2026-06-13). Scores are national percentiles (0–100). Insurance commentary is PropHunt's interpretation of the hazard data, not an insurance quote.

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