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

Logan County Disaster Risk

Logan County, West Virginia

FEMA Risk Rating

Relatively Low

National Percentile

79th

of 3,144 counties

State Rank

#5

of 55 (1 = highest risk)

Flood Risk

89th

percentile

Hazard Risk Breakdown

Flood

River, coastal, and surface flooding risk

Moderate

Higher than 89% of US counties

Wildfire

Wildland and wildland-urban interface fire risk

Moderate

Higher than 83% of US counties

Tornado

Tornado and severe thunderstorm risk

Very Low

Higher than 13% of US counties

Earthquake

Seismic activity and ground shaking risk

Relatively Low

Higher than 49% of US counties

Hurricane

Tropical cyclone and hurricane risk

Relatively Low

Higher than 54% of US counties

Risk Overview

About Natural Disaster Risk in Logan County, West Virginia

Logan County faces above-average disaster risk

Logan County's composite risk score of 79.23 significantly exceeds West Virginia's state average of 49.21, placing it in the relatively low risk category but with elevated overall exposure. This reflects substantial flood and wildfire vulnerability concentrated in southern portions of the county.

Logan ranks among West Virginia's higher-risk counties

Logan County scores 79.23 on the composite disaster risk scale, placing it in the upper tier of West Virginia's 55 counties for overall hazard exposure. The county faces compounded threats from both flooding and wildfire that demand serious preparedness attention.

Logan's wildfire risk significantly exceeds Harrison's

Logan County's composite score of 79.23 exceeds Harrison County's 73.60, driven primarily by Logan's exceptional wildfire risk of 82.57 versus Harrison's 25.22. Both counties face similar flood exposure (Logan 89.38, Harrison 86.70), but Logan's wildfire threat creates substantially greater overall vulnerability.

Wildfire and flooding dominate Logan's hazards

Wildfire poses an exceptional threat to Logan County with a risk score of 82.57, the highest among all hazard types. Flooding ranks second at 89.38, creating a compound vulnerability where both hazards can occur simultaneously and amplify disaster impacts.

Wildfire and flood protection are critical priorities

Logan County's 82.57 wildfire risk means you must ensure comprehensive wildfire coverage on your homeowners policy and actively maintain defensible space around your property. Couple this with mandatory flood insurance for the 89.38 flood risk, and consider separate umbrella coverage given the elevated compound hazard exposure.

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

Preparedness Guide

What to Prepare for in Logan County

Top Hazards by Exposure

  1. #1
    FloodPrepare
    89th percentile
  2. #2
    WildfirePrepare
    83th percentile
  3. #3
    HurricanePrepare
    54th percentile

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

Risk Advisory: Logan County

Risk Verdict

At the 79th percentile nationally, Logan County experiences a manageable level of natural hazard risk that falls below the U.S. median. High composite risk signals that multiple hazard types are elevated simultaneously; planning for more than one scenario is important in Logan County.

Hazard Breakdown

Flood risk is Logan County's dominant natural hazard, ranked at the 89th percentile nationally under FEMA's National Risk Index. Wildfire ranks second at the 83th percentile nationally. Additional tracked hazards include hurricane (54th percentile), earthquake (49th percentile), tornado (13th percentile).

Preparedness Context

Logan County's dominant hazard is flooding, ranked at the 89th percentile nationally. In addition to flood insurance, residents should identify their nearest evacuation shelter and store key documents in waterproof containers. Alongside flooding, wildfire exposure at the 83th percentile means households benefit from a multi-hazard preparedness plan rather than focusing on flood alone. Logan County's county emergency management office publishes hazard-specific guidance tailored to local conditions; bookmarking that resource and the county's alert system is a practical first step for any household.

Regional Context

Logan County falls 30.0 points above West Virginia's typical county risk level, which means the hazard environment here is notably more demanding than the state baseline.

Is your household prepared for Logan 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 Logan County, WV?
Logan County has a FEMA National Risk Index rating of Relatively Low, placing it in the 79th 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 Logan County?
Logan County is evaluated for five major natural hazard types: flooding (89th percentile), wildfire (83th percentile), hurricane (54th percentile), earthquake (49th percentile), tornado (13th percentile). The highest-risk hazard is flooding at the 89th 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 Logan County risk compare to the West Virginia average?
Logan County's composite risk percentile is 79th, compared to the West Virginia state average of 49th percentile. The state's overall risk rating is Relatively Low. This means Logan County faces higher natural disaster risk than the typical county in West Virginia.
Is Logan County at risk for flooding?
Yes, Logan County's flooding risk is at the 89th percentile nationally. This places it in the top quartile for this hazard type.
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.
Why is Logan County higher risk than average?
Logan County's composite risk score of 79th percentile is above the West Virginia state average of 49th percentile. This elevated risk is driven by flooding exposure (89th percentile), along with wildfire and hurricane risk. Geographic location, terrain, climate patterns, and proximity to flood zones or fault lines all influence a county's risk profile.
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.