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Oklahoma · FEMA + NOAA + National Risk Index

Blaine County, OK

4 FEMA disaster declarations (2021–2024), with a FEMA National Risk Index rating of Very Low. Most common hazard: Severe Ice Storm.

4
FEMA declarations
3
Major disasters
32
NRI risk · Very Low
Severe Ice Storm
Top hazard

FEMA's National Risk Index places Blaine County in the top 68% of U.S. counties for overall natural-hazard risk, and its FEMA disaster-declaration count is higher than 59% of all 2,729 counties tracked.

How does Blaine County compare?

Blaine County
4
Oklahoma county avg
4.2
National county avg
3.7

How disaster-prone is Blaine County?

Blaine County, Oklahoma has recorded 4 FEMA disaster declarations between 2021 and 2024, of which 3 were classified as Major Disaster declarations (DR) requiring federal individual and public assistance. That puts the county's average at 1.3 declarations per year across a 3-year record, or roughly 6% below the Oklahoma county average of 4.2 and 7% above the national county average of 3.7.

The dominant disaster type on record is Severe Ice Storm, with 3 of 4 declarations falling under this category. FEMA's data shows an elevated National Risk Index composite of 32.3/100 for this county (Very Low rating). Expected Annual Loss comes in at Very Low (roughly $9.5M in annualized losses). Social vulnerability (Relatively Moderate) and community resilience (Relatively Low) both factor into how that raw exposure plays out on the ground. Of the 18 hazards FEMA models, Ice Storm stands out as the sharpest exposure here, rated Relatively High.

Taken together, Blaine County reads as low relative risk on this historical lens, fewer federally recognized disasters than a typical U.S. county.

Risk Assessment

Risk Level

Low

vs. Oklahoma Avg

-6%

State avg: 4.2

vs. National Avg

+7%

National avg: 3.7

Avg Per Year

1.3

Over 3 years

FEMA NRI 8-hazard radar - Blaine County

Blaine County NRI risk profile 8-axis FEMA National Risk Index radar showing per-hazard composite scores for Earthquake 8, Flood 0, Hurricane 8, Tornado 25, Wildfire 8, Drought 48, Heat Wave 25, Winter Storm 70. Overall composite 24 of 100, classified Low. Earthquake Flood Hurricane Tornado Wildfire Drought Heat Wave Winter Storm 24 composite
Blaine County NRI risk profile FIPS 40011 · composite 24/100 (Low)
How to read this radar

The radar plots Blaine County's relative exposure to the eight headline natural hazards used by the FEMA National Risk Index. Each axis is the qualitative NRI risk rating (Very Low through Very High) re-expressed on a 0-100 scale so that the polygon shape lets you compare a county against another at a glance. A rounder polygon means broad multi-hazard exposure; a spiky polygon means one or two dominant hazards drive most of the modeled risk.

FEMA Records

4

Total declarations

NRI Source

FEMA 2023

Latest NRI release

County FIPS

40011

OK state code

Source: FEMA National Risk Index FEMA National Risk Index Per-county per-hazard ratings, 2023 release

Disaster Types

Severe Ice Storm 3
Severe Storm 1

Declaration Types

What DR / EM / FM mean

FEMA categorizes declarations as Major Disasters (DR), Emergencies (EM), or Fire Management Assistance (FM).

Major Disaster - 3 75.0%

of all 4 declarations

Emergency - 1 25.0%

of all 4 declarations

FEMA Declarations Timeline

Year Declarations
2024 1
2021 3

Disaster Declarations

DR# Title Type Incident Date
4791 SEVERE STORMS, STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS, TORNADOES, AND FLOODING DR Severe Storm 2024-06-14
4587 SEVERE WINTER STORMS DR Severe Ice Storm 2021-02-24
3555 SEVERE WINTER STORM EM Severe Ice Storm 2021-02-17
4575 SEVERE WINTER STORM DR Severe Ice Storm 2020-12-21

Storm Events in Oklahoma

Storm Type Events Fatalities Injuries Property Damage
Hail 6,730 0 1 $22.1M
Thunderstorm Wind 6,141 7 40 $204.8M
Drought 2,982 0 0 $0
Heat 2,651 7 428 $0
Excessive Heat 1,860 2 401 $0

Source: NOAA Storm Events Database NOAA Storm Events Database State-level aggregated data, 2015–2025

FEMA National Risk Index

Overall Risk

Very Low

Score: 32.3/100

Expected Annual Loss

Very Low

$9.5M/year

Social Vulnerability

Relatively Moderate

Community Resilience

Relatively Low

Hazard Risk Breakdown

Ice Storm Relatively High
Hail Relatively Moderate
Drought Relatively Moderate
Strong Wind Relatively Moderate
Wildfire Very Low
Cold Wave Relatively Low
Tornado Relatively Low
Landslide Very Low
Heat Wave Relatively Low
Earthquake Very Low
Winter Weather Relatively Low
Hurricane Very Low
Lightning Very Low

Source: FEMA National Risk Index (NRI) FEMA National Risk Index (NRI) Ratings reflect relative scores among all US counties. Data: hazards.fema.gov/nri

Counties with Similar Risk in Oklahoma

Frequently Asked Questions

How many natural disasters has Blaine County, Oklahoma had?
Blaine County, Oklahoma has received 4 FEMA disaster declarations from 2021 to 2024. Of these, 3 were major disaster declarations.
What is the most common disaster type in Blaine County?
The most common disaster type in Blaine County is Severe Ice Storm, with 3 declarations. Other disaster types include Severe Storm (1).
How does Blaine County's disaster risk compare to the Oklahoma average?
Blaine County has 4 disaster declarations, which is 6% lower than the Oklahoma county average of 4.2 declarations. Compared to the national county average of 3.7, it is 7% higher.
How many major FEMA disaster declarations has Blaine County received?
Blaine County has received 3 major disaster declarations, representing 75% of all 4 disaster declarations. Major disaster declarations typically involve significant damage requiring federal assistance.
What types of storms are most common in Oklahoma?
The most common storm types in Oklahoma include Hail (6,730 events), Thunderstorm Wind (6,141 events), Drought (2,982 events). NOAA storm event data covers severe weather from 2015 to 2025.
What was the worst year for disasters in Blaine County?
The most active year for disaster declarations in Blaine County was 2021, with 3 declarations. The county has FEMA disaster data spanning 2021 to 2024.
What is the overall disaster risk level for Blaine County?
Blaine County's 4 FEMA disaster declarations put it in the low-risk band, fewer federally recognized disasters than a typical U.S. county over the same span.
What is the FEMA National Risk Index score for Blaine County?
According to the FEMA National Risk Index, Blaine County, Oklahoma has an overall risk score of 32.3 out of 100 (Very Low). The county's social vulnerability rating is Relatively Moderate and community resilience is Relatively Low. The Expected Annual Loss (EAL) score is Very Low, representing $9.5M in annualized losses.
Which natural hazard poses the greatest risk to Blaine County?
Based on FEMA NRI data, the highest-risk natural hazard in Blaine County is Ice Storm (risk rating: Relatively High). Other significant hazards include Hail (Relatively Moderate) and Drought (Relatively Moderate). These scores are based on FEMA's analysis of historical event frequency, exposed assets, and community vulnerability.
Data Sources & Methodology

Disaster declaration data comes from the FEMA OpenFEMA Disaster Declarations Summaries v2 API, which includes all federally declared disasters, emergencies, and fire management assistance grants.

Storm event data is sourced from the NOAA Storm Events Database (2015–2025), which tracks significant weather events including thunderstorms, tornadoes, floods, and winter storms.

This data is provided for informational purposes only. FEMA disaster declarations represent federal response actions and may not capture all local emergencies or weather events.

What this means for Blaine County

Blaine County, OK has 4 FEMA disaster declarations on record, a low historical disaster load, 6% below the Oklahoma county average.

  • Its most common federal declaration type is major disaster (3 of 4) - know the hazards most likely here before they happen. Oklahoma overview
  • See how this county ranks against the rest of the country for disaster frequency. Most-disaster rankings
  • Read how to read FEMA declarations, NRI risk scores, and what they do and don't tell you. Disaster-data guide

Historical declaration counts describe past federal response, not a forecast. For current threats, follow the National Weather Service and local officials; in an emergency call 911.

All federal data sources used on this page
Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainHazard Editorial

Verify with FEMA → · Verify with FEMA NRI → · Verify with NOAA →

Every figure on PlainHazard is rendered directly from FEMA federal disaster data, no number is typed in by an editor. This page draws directly on FEMA federal disaster data, no figure is typed in by an editor. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these numbers, or report a data error.