Environmental Risks
Natural hazards and nearby sites that can affect health, cost, and resale: flood, wildfire, seismic zones, power lines, pipelines, and more.
Landfills
What a nearby landfill means for California home buyers: active vs. closed sites, landfill gas and odor, the measured effect on home values, and how to check any address in the state's SWIS database before you tour.
Gas Pipelines
What a nearby natural gas transmission pipeline means for California home buyers: how rare pipeline failures really are, what the easement changes on the lot, the measured effect on home values, and how to check any address before you tour.
California Wildfire Risk
What a home's Fire Hazard Severity Zone means for California buyers: how the Cal Fire FHSZ hazard rating works, how to check a specific address, the real cost of a wildfire loss, and the defensible-space and home-hardening steps within your control.
Superfund and contaminated sites
What a nearby Superfund or contaminated site means for California home buyers: what the term actually means, why proximity is a screening signal rather than exposure, and how to check a specific address before you tour.
Power Lines
What high-voltage power lines mean for California home buyers: whether EMF is a health risk, the practical factors that actually affect a purchase (easement, view, resale), and how to check a specific address before you tour.
Landslide
What California's landslide zones mean for home buyers: how to read the earthquake-induced landslide zone for a property, what it costs, and the rainfall and post-fire debris-flow risk the maps don't cover.
FEMA Flood Zones
What FEMA flood zones mean for California home buyers: how to read a property's flood zone, what flood insurance costs, and how to spot it before you tour.
California Earthquake Fault and Liquefaction Zones
What California's earthquake fault and liquefaction zones mean for home buyers: how to read them for a specific property, what they cost, and how to spot them before you tour.