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Hurricane Wind Zones Explained
Wind Zone & Building Code Guide · 2026

Hurricane Wind Zones Explained What Your Zone Means for Your Shutters

Before you buy hurricane shutters, you need to know your wind zone. It determines which products are legally code-compliant for your address, what your insurance company requires, and ultimately how much you'll spend. Here's everything you need to know.

Quick summary

Before you buy hurricane shutters, you need to know your wind zone. It determines which products are legally code-compliant for your address, what your insurance company requires, and ultimately how much you'll spend. Here's everything you need to know.

What Is a Hurricane Wind Zone?

What Is a Hurricane Wind Zone?

A wind zone is a geographic designation that specifies the minimum design wind speed — in miles per hour — that structures and storm protection products must be engineered to withstand in a given area.

The International Building Code (IBC) and each state's building code divide coastal areas into wind speed zones based on historical storm data, geographic exposure, and risk modeling. The higher your zone's wind speed requirement, the stronger — and generally more expensive — your storm protection needs to be.

Wind zones are determined at the county level in most states, and sometimes at the city or township level. Two homes five miles apart can be in different wind zones with different product requirements.

The Main Wind Zone Categories

The Main Wind Zone Categories

ZoneDesign Wind SpeedTypical LocationProduct Requirement
Basic90–110 mphInland areas, low exposureStandard rated products
Exposure B110–130 mphSuburban coastal areasMid-range impact ratings
Exposure C130–150 mphOpen coastal terrainHigher impact ratings
Exposure D150–170 mphWaterfront, open water exposureHigh-impact rated products
HVHZ170+ mphMiami-Dade & Broward FL onlyNOA required — strictest in US

The High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) covering Miami-Dade and Broward counties in Florida is the most demanding wind zone in the United States. Products installed there must carry a Miami-Dade Notice of Acceptance (NOA) — a separate, more rigorous certification than the standard Florida Product Approval used in the rest of the state.

How to Find Your Wind Zone

How to Find Your Wind Zone

There are three reliable ways to find your exact wind zone:

  1. County building department website — search "[your county] wind zone map" or "[your county] building code wind speed." Most counties publish their wind zone maps online.
  2. Our cost calculator — our free calculator automatically loads your county's wind zone when you select your state and county. This is the fastest method.
  3. Florida residents — use the Florida Building Code's online wind speed lookup at floridabuilding.org. Enter your address and it returns your exact design wind speed.
⚠️ Do not rely on a contractor telling you your wind zone without verifying independently. Some contractors understate wind zone requirements to sell lower-cost products that don't actually meet code for your address.
What Is a Florida Product Approval?

What Is a Florida Product Approval?

In Florida, every storm protection product installed on a building must carry a Florida Product Approval number (FL number). This is issued by the Florida Building Commission after independent testing proves the product meets the state's wind resistance and impact standards.

Every approved product has an FL number formatted like FL12345. You can look up any product at floridabuilding.org by entering the FL number.

The product approval specifies:

  • The maximum design wind speed the product is rated for
  • Whether it meets large-missile or small-missile impact standards
  • The specific sizes and configurations that are approved
  • Installation requirements — fastener size, spacing, substrate

If your contractor installs a product in a size or configuration not listed in the product approval, the installation is not code-compliant even if the product itself is approved.

Miami-Dade NOA — The Strictest Standard

Miami-Dade NOA — The Strictest Standard

If you live in Miami-Dade or Broward County, standard Florida Product Approval is not enough. You need products with a Miami-Dade Notice of Acceptance (NOA).

NOA testing is significantly more rigorous than standard FL approval — it includes large-missile impact testing, cyclic wind pressure testing, and water infiltration testing that other counties don't require.

Products with NOA approval cost 10–20% more than comparable non-HVHZ products and are required by law for any permitted shutter installation in Miami-Dade or Broward. Do not let a contractor install non-NOA products in the HVHZ — they will not pass inspection and may need to be removed at your expense.

Look up any product's NOA at miamidade.gov.

Wind Zone Requirements in Other Coastal States

Wind Zone Requirements in Other Coastal States

Every coastal state has its own building code wind speed requirements. Here's a quick overview:

StateCode StandardCoastal Wind SpeedWhere to Verify
FloridaFlorida Building Code110–180+ mphfloridabuilding.org
TexasTexas Windstorm (TWIA zones)110–150 mph coastaltwia.org
LouisianaLouisiana State Plumbing & Building Code100–150 mphParish building dept
South CarolinaSouth Carolina Building Code110–150 mph coastCounty building dept
North CarolinaNC State Building Code110–160 mph Outer Banksncdoi.gov
New JerseyNJ Uniform Construction Code110–140 mph shorenj.gov/dca
New YorkNYC Building Code / NYS Building Code110–140 mph Long Islandnyc.gov/buildings

In Texas, the TWIA (Texas Windstorm Insurance Association) zone map is particularly important — properties in TWIA zones require windstorm certification on all hurricane protection for insurance purposes.

The scenarios below are illustrative composites based on documented market patterns, FEMA post-storm data, and OIR wind mitigation discount schedules. They represent realistic outcomes, not specific individuals.

Miami-Dade County — The Non-NOA Installation

Carlos had lived in Hialeah for 20 years when he decided in 2021 to upgrade from storm panels to accordion shutters. He got three quotes and went with the lowest — $12,800 for whole-house accordion shutters. The contractor told him the product had 'Florida approval' and was 'code compliant.' Carlos didn't know the difference between a Florida Product Approval and a Miami-Dade NOA.

The installation was completed in June 2021. When the contractor applied for the final inspection, the Miami-Dade Building Department rejected it. The product installed — while having a valid FL approval number — did not carry Miami-Dade NOA approval. In the HVHZ, NOA is required. The inspector ordered the shutters to be removed.

Carlos confronted the contractor, who claimed he didn't know the product didn't have NOA. Whether that was true or not was never resolved — the contractor did eventually reinstall NOA-approved shutters at no additional charge after a six-month dispute, but Carlos spent that hurricane season with an incomplete, non-inspected installation. 'Florida approval and Miami-Dade approval are not the same thing,' he said. 'I know that now.'

What this means for your home: In Miami-Dade and Broward counties, every shutter and impact window installation must carry a Miami-Dade Notice of Acceptance — not just a Florida Product Approval. These are two different certifications. Before signing any contract in the HVHZ, ask specifically: 'Does this product have a current Miami-Dade NOA?' Then verify it yourself at miamidade.gov/building/pc-product_control.asp.

Mississippi Gulf Coast — Wind Zone Mismatch on New Construction

When Angela and her husband built a new home in Bay St. Louis in 2019, their builder specified storm panels as the opening protection. The permit was approved, the panels were installed, and the home passed final inspection. Angela assumed everything was properly specified.

In 2022, when Angela applied for homeowner's insurance from a new carrier, the insurer's underwriter flagged the storm panels. Bay St. Louis sits in an area with a 130 mph design wind speed requirement under Mississippi's building code. The panels the builder had specified were approved for 110 mph. The installer had used a product that passed under an older code version still in the county's system — technically a code violation that had slipped through inspection.

Angela's new insurer declined to offer the wind mitigation discount. She paid $3,200 to have compliant 130 mph-rated panels fabricated and reinstalled, and had the permit re-opened and re-inspected. Her builder denied responsibility, citing the passed inspection. 'The inspection passed,' Angela said. 'But passing an inspection and meeting the code are apparently not always the same thing.'

What this means for your home: Design wind speeds for your county are specific numbers — not general categories. When getting quotes for any storm protection, ask the contractor explicitly: 'What is the design wind speed for my address, and what is this product rated for?' These numbers should match or exceed your county's requirement. A product rated below your design wind speed is not code-compliant regardless of whether it passed inspection.

Outer Banks, North Carolina — The Exposure Category Difference

Michael purchased a vacation home on Hatteras Island in 2017 with existing storm panels. The prior owner had provided a product approval certificate showing panels rated for 130 mph — which Michael assumed was adequate. His insurance agent, based on the mainland, accepted this without comment.

When Michael had a wind mitigation inspection done in 2021 for a policy renewal, the inspector noted that properties on Hatteras Island sit in Exposure Category D — open ocean exposure — which requires products rated for 150 mph under North Carolina's building code. The 130 mph panels were underrated for the site's actual exposure category.

Michael's insurer rescinded the wind mitigation discount and retroactively adjusted premiums — a $2,100 correction. New panels rated for 150 mph cost $3,400 installed. 'Everyone told me 130 was fine for North Carolina,' Michael said. 'Nobody told me the island has a different exposure category than the mainland.'

What this means for your home: Exposure category — which accounts for terrain roughness, distance from open water, and obstructions — significantly affects your required product rating. A home on an open barrier island has a higher exposure category than a mainland home in the same county, requiring higher-rated products. Always specify your exact address when getting product approval verification, not just your county or zip code.

Sources: Miami-Dade Building Department NOA requirement enforcement records; Mississippi Building Commission code compliance data; NC Building Code Exposure Category maps; NHC tropical cyclone reports.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my wind zone change if I'm a mile inland from the beach?

Yes, potentially. Wind zones are based on exposure category which accounts for distance from open water, terrain roughness, and obstructions. A home one block from the beach may be in a higher exposure category than one a mile inland in the same county. Your county building department can tell you your specific exposure category based on your address.

What happens if I install shutters that don't meet my wind zone?

The installation will fail the building inspection. If installed without a permit, the shutters may need to be removed and replaced when discovered — which typically happens at home sale. Your insurance company may also deny wind mitigation credits for non-compliant protection.

My contractor said I don't need an NOA — I'm in Miami-Dade. Is that right?

No. Any contractor telling you that NOA approval is not required for a permitted installation in Miami-Dade or Broward is either misinformed or trying to sell you a cheaper non-compliant product. All permitted shutter and impact window installations in the HVHZ require products with valid NOA approval.