Derbyshire · Flood Risk
Flood risk in Derby: what to check before buying
Derby sits on the River Derwent which runs through the city centre on its way to join the Trent south of the city. The November 2019 floods caused widespread damage along the Derwent corridor; the November 2000 floods affected the wider Trent valley. The Our City Our River flood alleviation programme is the medium-term scheme protecting central Derby and the Derwent corridor.
Last updated: 6 May 2026. Editorially reviewed: 20 May 2026.
Tool shortcut
Check flood signals for a UK address in 15 seconds
Flood-zone signals where available, with the manual follow-up checks spelled out.
Run a free previewKnown flood-prone areas in Derby
Documented flood-prone areas include Darley Abbey, Little Chester and parts of central Derby along the Derwent; Chaddesden and Spondon along the Derwent and its tributaries; and parts of Allenton and Alvaston in the south of the city. The Derwent corridor through Derby's older industrial belt is the headline risk area.
These are documented historical risk areas. Risk assessment for any specific address requires checking the relevant national flood map at the postcode level. The city-wide picture above is context, not the answer.
Environment Agency flood zones explained
The EA bands river and sea flood risk into four categories: Very Low, Low, Medium, High. Each band is based on annual chance of flooding. Planning policy uses a parallel set of Flood Zones 1, 2, 3a and 3b. For Derby buyers, the zones matter for two reasons: lender appetite (where insurance is constrained) and resale risk.
EA Flood Zones 2 and 3 follow the Derwent corridor through the city. The Our City Our River scheme has been progressively upgrading defences along the river since the 2010s.
- Zone 1 / Very Low: <0.1% annual chance from rivers or sea. Standard insurance, no buyer concern.
- Zone 2 / Low: 0.1%–1% annual chance. Standard insurance for most homes; check surface water separately.
- Zone 3a: 1%+ annual chance from rivers. Flood Re eligibility important on pre-2009 stock.
- Zone 3b: functional floodplain. Specialist insurer placement, lender appetite varies.
Surface water flooding in Derby
Surface-water risk in Derby's older industrial neighbourhoods is moderate. The EA surface-water map shows risk patches around inner-ring suburbs not captured on the river map.
Surface water is the form of flood risk most often missed because it isn't shown on the headline river map. Sellers often disclose "not in a flood zone" truthfully on the river map while surface water risk is medium or high. Always check both layers on the EA map.
What flood risk means for your mortgage and insurance
Lenders rarely refuse outright on flood risk. They care whether buildings insurance is available at standard cost. The chain runs:
- Conveyancer's environmental search flags flood risk to the solicitor
- Solicitor reports to lender, asks buyer to confirm insurance can be obtained
- Buyer obtains a quote, shares the policy with the lender
- Lender confirms drawdown if insurance is in place at acceptable cost
For Flood Re-eligible homes (most pre-2009 housing stock), insurance is available at near-standard rates. Post-2009 builds in high-risk areas, or homes with prior claim history, sit in the specialist insurer market. Quotes vary widely and the lender wants to see the policy before drawdown.
How to check your specific address
City-wide context is useful for orientation, but the only flood risk that matters is the one for the address you're about to buy. Three steps before your offer:
- 1Open the relevant national flood map. For England, use check-long-term-flood-risk.service.gov.uk and read the available river, surface water and reservoir layers.
- 2Read the seller's TA6 form for any past flooding disclosed by the current owner.
- 3Get a buildings insurance quote at quote stage, not after exchange. Your lender will need it.
Run the check
Check flood signals for a UK address in 15 seconds
Flood-zone signals where available, with the manual follow-up checks spelled out.
Run a free previewFrequently asked questions
Is Derby high risk for flooding?
Derby sits on the River Derwent which runs through the city centre on its way to join the Trent south of the city. The November 2019 floods caused widespread damage along the Derwent corridor; the November 2000 floods affected the wider Trent valley. The Our City Our River flood alleviation programme is the medium-term scheme protecting central Derby and the Derwent corridor. The honest answer for any specific address is on the relevant national flood-map service. In England, the Environment Agency long-term flood risk service runs separate checks for river/sea, surface water, and reservoir risk.
Will flood risk affect my mortgage in Derby?
Mortgage lenders rarely refuse on flood risk alone. What they care about is whether buildings insurance is available at standard cost. The conveyancer's environmental search and the EA flood map result are the two documents lenders look at most closely.
How do I check if a specific address in Derby is in a flood zone?
Use the relevant national flood-map service: Environment Agency for England, Natural Resources Wales for Wales, SEPA for Scotland, or local/DAERA guidance for Northern Ireland. Enter the postcode, select the address, and read the available risk types. Surface-water risk in Derby's older industrial neighbourhoods is moderate. The EA surface-water map shows risk patches around inner-ring suburbs not captured on the river map. Send the public-source result to your conveyancer with the seller's TA6 form.
Keep going
Related Derby buyer pages
- Subsidence risk in Derby , the other major environmental risk to check before offering on a Derby property.
- Full property check in Derby , flood, subsidence, EPC, crime, schools, broadband, listed status, price comparison.
- Flood risk when buying a house: UK guide , the national guide to EA flood data for buyers.
- House buying checklist , the full pre-offer checklist.
Editorial review
Editorial owner: BiteRight Ltd, operator of MyPropertyScan. We review buyer guides against UK public property datasets, RICS survey wording, lender requirements, and common buyer questions.
Pages are updated when source coverage, property-risk guidance, survey cost assumptions, or product checks materially change. Methodology and dataset limitations are explained on the MyPropertyScan methodology page.
Sources used
We use UK public and specialist sources where they are available. Public datasets can be incomplete, delayed, or missing for some addresses. Treat them as a starting point, not as a replacement for professional advice.
Source standard: preference goes to official government datasets, statutory bodies, professional standards, and primary dataset publishers. We cite the source family on the page and explain coverage limits rather than filling gaps with unsupported estimates.
General information only. Not legal, mortgage, insurance, or surveying advice. Always confirm with your own surveyor, broker, and conveyancer before making decisions. MyPropertyScan is operated by BiteRight Ltd.