GeraSure / County Hazard Risk / Santa Clara, CA
Santa Clara County, California: Natural Hazard Risk
Gera County Hazard Score: 67.3/100 (High) · FEMA Rating: Very High · Population: 1,934,625. Based on FEMA National Risk Index (November 2023).
What is the natural hazard risk for Santa Clara County, California?
Santa Clara County, California has a Gera County Hazard Score (GCHS) of 67.3/100 (High), based on FEMA National Risk Index November 2023 data. Its Expected Annual Loss rank is 99.9/100, social vulnerability rank 37.1/100 and community resilience rank 68.9/100, covering a population of 1,934,625.
GCHS components — Santa Clara County (November 2023)
| Component | Score / 100 | GCHS Weight | Contribution | What it measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Expected Annual Loss (EAL) | 99.9 | 50% | 50.0 | Estimated annual losses from 18 natural hazards |
| Social Vulnerability (SOVI) | 37.1 | 30% | 11.1 | Community factors affecting disaster response capacity |
| Lack of Resilience (100 − RESL) | 31 | 20% | 6.2 | Resilience score 68.9/100 → inverted so higher = more hazard |
| Gera County Hazard Score (GCHS) | 67.3 | 100% | 67.3 | High — composite index |
GCHS = 0.50 × 99.9 + 0.30 × 37.1 + 0.20 × (100 − 68.9) = 67.3. All inputs are FEMA NRI percentile ranks 0–100.
Santa Clara County Hazard Checker
Explore what the GCHS means for insurance and disaster preparedness in this county.
Gera County Hazard Score (GCHS)
What this means for insurance
Counties rated High on the GCHS often carry above-average insurance costs for hazard-exposed properties. Multi-peril coverage gaps are common.
GCHS is computed by Gera from FEMA NRI data. It is a risk-context index — not an insurance premium quote. Actual premiums depend on your specific property and chosen coverage.
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Santa Clara County hazard risk: frequently asked questions
- What does a GCHS of 67.3/100 mean for Santa Clara County?
- A GCHS of 67.3/100 places Santa Clara County in the "High" band. This is an above-average risk rating. The county's Expected Annual Loss rank (99.9/100) and Social Vulnerability (37.1/100) are primary risk contributors.
- Which natural hazards most affect Santa Clara County?
- The GCHS is computed from FEMA's Expected Annual Loss (EAL) score, which aggregates 18 natural hazard types: hurricanes, riverine flooding, tornadoes, wildfires, earthquakes, hail, drought, winter weather, lightning, strong wind, coastal flooding, cold wave, heat wave, ice storm, landslide, avalanche, tsunami and volcanic activity. Santa Clara County's EAL rank is 99.9/100 — very high, suggesting substantial exposure to one or more of these hazards.
- What is the FEMA National Risk Index?
- The FEMA National Risk Index (NRI) is a publicly available dataset produced by the US Federal Emergency Management Agency that measures the risk of natural hazards for every US county and census tract. It combines 18 natural hazard types, community social vulnerability and community resilience into a single expected-loss-based risk score. Gera computes the GCHS from the NRI's county-level EAL, SOVI and RESL percentile scores using a documented formula.
- How does Santa Clara County compare to the national average?
- The national mean GCHS across the 480 most-populous US counties is 66.1/100. Santa Clara County scores 67.3/100, which is 1.2 points above the national mean. FEMA's own risk rating for this county is "Very High".
Other CA counties
All counties →Contains public sector information published by Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and licensed under the US Government open data, public domain. Source: FEMA National Risk Index (NRI) — Harvard Dataverse (November 2023, published 2024).
Full GCHS formula and verification: Gera County Hazard Score methodology.