County page

Sunflower County, Mississippi

County-level FEMA declaration history, assistance rollups, and flood insurance context for Sunflower County.

Total declarations
22
1971 to 2026
Tracked FEMA aid
$3.1M
PA + assistance signals
Most common type
Severe Storm
266 registrations tracked
Most recent event
DR-4899
Feb 6, 2026
Cross-link

Need the flood-zone side of the story?

The same county on FloodZoneMap.org covers flood-zone context, map interpretation, and related flood insurance questions that sit adjacent to this disaster-history page.

Open FloodZoneMap.org
Federal spending

Public + individual assistance structure

Public assistance totals come from FEMA project-level obligations. Individual assistance totals prioritize the validated or intake totals without double counting both sources together.

Public assistance

Infrastructure repair, debris removal, emergency measures, and related project obligations.

Roads and Bridges$1.9M
Debris Removal$213K
Parks, Recreational Facilities, and Other Items$94K
Utilities$84K
Buildings and Equipment$62K
Emergency Protective Measures$44K
Total PA obligated$2.4M

Individual assistance

Registrations, housing assistance, and other-needs dollars surfaced through the FEMA assistance datasets.

Tracked registrations266
IHP / household aid$656K
Housing assistance$211K
Other needs assistance$445K
NFIP claims paid$1.7M
Timeline

Every declaration on record for this county

Ordered newest to oldest so recent search intent is handled first, without losing the long historical tail.

BiologicalMar 2020Sunflower County

COVID-19

EM-3474-MS · Jan 20, 2020 to May 11, 2023
$0PA obligated
0Registrations
$0Household aid
PAPrograms
About this county

Disaster history context for Sunflower County

Sunflower County, Mississippi has 22 FEMA disaster declarations on record, spanning from 1971 to 2026. The dominant hazard type is severe storm, followed by hurricane. That is close to the Mississippi average of 26 declarations per county. Total tracked FEMA obligations for this county exceed $3.1M, split between public infrastructure repair and individual household assistance.

Public assistance covers debris removal, emergency protective measures, and infrastructure repair managed through FEMA project obligations. Individual assistance includes housing aid, other-needs grants, and validated registrations reported through the IHP datasets. These figures reflect what FEMA's open datasets report — actual disbursements to individuals and local agencies may differ from the obligation totals shown here.

The NFIP flood insurance section shows 191 claims and 0 active policies currently tracked for this county. Flood insurance claims and disaster declarations overlap but are not the same — a county can have significant flood claims without a major disaster declaration, and vice versa.