riskbycounty
FEMA NRI 1.19.0Updated Nov 2023 · Coverage 2014–2023Methodology

Crawford County Disaster Risk

Crawford County, Georgia

FEMA Risk Rating

Very Low

National Percentile

4th

of 3,144 counties

State Rank

#151

of 159 (1 = highest risk)

Flood Risk

8th

percentile

Hazard Risk Breakdown

Flood

River, coastal, and surface flooding risk

Very Low

Higher than 8% of US counties

Wildfire

Wildland and wildland-urban interface fire risk

Relatively Low

Higher than 44% of US counties

Tornado

Tornado and severe thunderstorm risk

Very Low

Higher than 23% of US counties

Earthquake

Seismic activity and ground shaking risk

Very Low

Higher than 25% of US counties

Hurricane

Tropical cyclone and hurricane risk

Relatively Low

Higher than 59% of US counties

Risk Overview

About Natural Disaster Risk in Crawford County, Georgia

Crawford County remarkably safe from disasters

Crawford County's composite risk score of just 3.94 places it in the very low category—far below Georgia's state average of 39.49 and among the safest counties in the entire nation. The county's hazard exposure is minimal across flood, tornado, earthquake, and wildfire categories. Crawford County residents enjoy exceptional natural disaster protection.

Georgia's safest county by far

Crawford County's 3.94 composite score makes it Georgia's safest county, with remarkably low flood risk (8.30), tornado risk (22.58), and earthquake risk (25.13). Even wildfire risk of 44.21, while slightly above-average, pales compared to most counties statewide. Crawford County is a genuine outlier of safety in Georgia's hazard landscape.

Incomparably safer than surrounding area

Crawford County (3.94) stands as an island of exceptional safety compared to Crisp County (52.29), Cook County (34.83), and all other surrounding counties. No nearby county approaches Crawford's minimal risk profile. This stark difference reflects Crawford's fortunate geographic position away from major hazard corridors.

Minimal disaster risk across the board

Crawford County faces virtually no significant natural disaster threats—tornado risk of 22.58 and earthquake risk of 25.13 are among Georgia's lowest, while flood risk of 8.30 is exceptional. Hurricane risk of 58.53 represents the county's highest score but remains well-managed given geographic distance from the coast. Residents enjoy extraordinary natural disaster protection.

Standard insurance likely sufficient

Crawford County's exceptional composite risk of 3.94 means standard homeowners insurance provides ample coverage for virtually all residents—the county faces none of Georgia's typical disaster exposures. Flood insurance and earthquake coverage are optional considerations for most properties given negligible risks. Annual policy reviews remain prudent practice, though urgency is minimal.

Source: FEMA National Risk Index · Narrative reviewed by Evan Brooks, Data Editor

Preparedness Guide

What to Prepare for in Crawford County

Top Hazards by Exposure

  1. #1
    HurricanePrepare
    59th percentile
  2. #2
    WildfirePrepare
    44th percentile
  3. #3
    EarthquakePrepare
    25th percentile

Source: FEMA National Risk Index v1.19.0 · Percentiles are national (3,144 counties)

Risk Advisory: Crawford County

Risk Verdict

Crawford County's overall natural disaster score at the 4th percentile puts it well below the national median for hazard exposure. Crawford County's 4th percentile ranking is favorable, though every county carries at least one natural hazard worth knowing — reviewing the specific risks listed above helps households focus their preparedness where it matters most.

Hazard Breakdown

Hurricane risk is Crawford County's dominant natural hazard, ranked at the 59th percentile nationally under FEMA's National Risk Index. Wildfire ranks second at the 44th percentile nationally. Additional tracked hazards include earthquake (25th percentile), tornado (23th percentile), flood (8th percentile).

Preparedness Context

Hurricane exposure at the 59th percentile nationally makes Crawford County a county where pre-season preparedness — not storm-day preparation — determines outcomes. Crawford County evacuation decisions under a watch or warning benefit from prior planning, not routes improvised under time pressure. Wildfire at the 44th percentile nationally is Crawford County's secondary hazard, often intensified by the same weather systems that produce hurricane conditions. Crawford County residents benefit from registering with the county's special-needs evacuation registry if household members have mobility limitations, require electricity-dependent medical equipment, or cannot self-evacuate — registration in advance of storm season is required.

Regional Context

Crawford County's composite risk score sits 35.5 points below the Georgia county average, reflecting a more favorable hazard environment than the state typical.

Is your household prepared for Crawford County's hazards?

Review FEMA's county-specific preparedness checklists and emergency planning guides.

FEMA Ready Guide →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the natural disaster risk in Crawford County, GA?
Crawford County has a FEMA National Risk Index rating of Very Low, placing it in the 4th percentile nationally out of 3,144 counties. This composite score reflects the county's overall exposure to natural hazards including floods, wildfires, tornadoes, earthquakes, and hurricanes, weighted by expected annual loss and social vulnerability.
What types of natural hazards affect Crawford County?
Crawford County is evaluated for five major natural hazard types: hurricane (59th percentile), wildfire (44th percentile), earthquake (25th percentile), tornado (23th percentile), flooding (8th percentile). The highest-risk hazard is hurricane at the 59th percentile nationally. These scores are derived from FEMA's National Risk Index, which analyzes expected annual loss, social vulnerability, and community resilience for each hazard type.
How does Crawford County risk compare to the Georgia average?
Crawford County's composite risk percentile is 4th, compared to the Georgia state average of 40th percentile. The state's overall risk rating is Very Low. This means Crawford County faces lower natural disaster risk than the typical county in Georgia.
Is Crawford County at risk for hurricane?
Yes, Crawford County's hurricane risk is at the 59th percentile nationally. This is above the national median. For flooding specifically, Crawford County is at the 8th percentile.
How is natural disaster risk measured?
FEMA's National Risk Index (NRI) calculates risk scores for 18 natural hazard types across all U.S. counties and census tracts. The composite score combines Expected Annual Loss (estimated dollar losses from each hazard), Social Vulnerability (demographic factors affecting disaster impact), and Community Resilience (ability to recover). Percentile scores rank each county against all 3,144 U.S. counties, and risk ratings range from Very Low to Very High.
Is Crawford County a safe place to live?
Crawford County's composite risk score of 4th percentile is below the Georgia state average of 40th percentile, indicating relatively lower exposure to natural hazards. However, no county is completely risk-free. The primary hazard type is hurricane at the 59th percentile. Residents should still maintain emergency preparedness plans and appropriate insurance coverage.
By Evan Brooks, Data EditorUpdated Reviewed by Evan Brooks, Data Editor

Data Source

Risk data sourced from the FEMA National Risk Index (NRI). Risk scores are relative rankings (0–100) across all US counties — not absolute risk measures. Higher scores indicate higher relative risk compared to other counties.

Disclaimer: This data is informational only. It is not financial, insurance, or legal advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making insurance or real estate decisions.