Creek County

Oklahoma — Natural Disaster Risk Assessment

Medium

Composite Risk Score

83.2

National percentile: 83th

Creek County faces medium composite natural disaster risk (NRI Risk Index score 83.2, 83th national percentile), driven primarily by ice storm and hail exposure. Expected annual loss across all 18 hazard types is $44M.

Source: FEMA National Risk Index v1.20 · Updated December 2025

Expected Annual Loss $44M Annualized county-level EAL
Social Vulnerability Medium Population sensitivity
Community Resilience Medium Capacity to recover
Population 72K Latest estimate

Top Hazards

Ice Storm
Very High $3M/yr
Hail
High $2M/yr
Heat Wave
Medium $5M/yr

All 18 Hazard Risks

Ice Storm Very High 1.24 / yr $3M
Hail High 9.73 / yr $2M
Heat Wave Medium 25.16 / yr $5M
Wildfire Medium 0.01 / yr $2M
Tornado High 1.16 / yr $8M
Cold Wave High 1.53 / yr $7M
Strong Wind High 6.49 / yr $2M
Winter Weather High 8.89 / yr $264K
Landslide Low 0.44 / yr $10K
Riverine Flood Low 2.07 / yr $13M
Drought Medium 27.66 / yr $473K
Lightning Medium 54.42 / yr $307K
Earthquake Very Low 0.00 / yr $339K
Hurricane Very Low 0.01 / yr $4K
Avalanche Very Low 0.00 / yr $0
Coastal Flood Very Low 0.00 / yr $0
Tsunami Very Low 0.00 / yr $0
Volcanic Activity Very Low 0.00 / yr $0

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the overall natural disaster risk for Creek County?

Creek County has a composite FEMA National Risk Index score of 83.2 out of 100, placing it in the Medium category and the 83th national percentile. This combines Expected Annual Loss, Social Vulnerability, and Community Resilience across 18 hazard types.

What are the top natural hazards in Creek County?

The three highest-rated hazards are Ice Storm (Very High, $3M EAL), Hail (High, $2M EAL), Heat Wave (Medium, $5M EAL). These account for most of the county's expected annual losses.

How does Creek County compare to other Oklahoma counties?

Creek County ranks #8 of 77 Oklahoma counties for overall natural disaster risk, with a medium rating.

What does Expected Annual Loss (EAL) mean?

EAL is FEMA's estimate of average annual dollar losses from natural hazards, calculated from historical event data and exposure models. Creek County's $44M EAL is a statistical average, not a guarantee for any specific year or address.