FloodZoneMap.org

Flood — Citrus, FL

Aug 1, 2015

A weak area of low pressure developed along a stationary frontal boundary across north Florida. This allowed for waves of showers and thunderstorms to move across the area for a few days causing flooding throughout much of the Tampa Bay area. The heaviest rain fall on the morning of the 3rd with some portions of Hillsborough, Pinellas and Pasco Counties receiving 6 to 8 of rain. This event was exacerbated from the flooding and saturated soils from multiple heavy rain events that occurred on Augu

Source: NOAA National Weather Service Storm Events Database (event 588076). Narrative written by NWS staff at the time of the event.

Flood Risk Context for Citrus, FL

This event is one of many recorded floods in Citrus County. See the full FEMA flood zone map, NFIP claim totals, and disaster history for the area.

View Citrus County flood data →

More Flood Stories

Storm Surge/Tide$102.0M damage

Coastal Citrus, FL · Sep 1, 2016

Hermine formed in the Florida Straits south of Key West on August 28th. It remained a very disorganized tropical depression for a few days before the environment around it gradually became more favorable and it became a tropical storm late in the day on the 30th.

Read the full account →
Tropical Storm$3.0M damage

Inland Citrus, FL · Sep 10, 2017

Monetary losses do not include insured losses. Fatalities are preliminary until the Florida Medical Examiner releases the official information. This document will be updated once released.

Read the full account →
Tropical Storm$3.0M damage

Coastal Citrus, FL · Sep 10, 2017

Monetary losses do not include insured losses. Fatalities are preliminary until the Florida Medical Examiner releases the official information. This document will be updated once released.

Read the full account →
Tropical Storm$15K damage

Coastal Citrus, FL · Sep 28, 2022

Hurricane Ian formed in the central Caribbean Sea on September 23 and moved through the western Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico and Western Atlantic making four separate landfalls.

Read the full account →