Rules & Licenses · Southern Tier
Broome Flood and Building Questions Should Start With the Local Code Office
Broome County's code directory helps owners find the right municipal office before asking floodplain, building, or inspection questions.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Broome County property questions often follow the rivers. The Chenango and Susquehanna shape the county, and smaller tributaries can make a basement, fill job, or accessory structure look different on a wet map than it does on a dry day. The county’s Municipal Code Departments page helps find the right city, town, or village code office.
FEMA’s Map Service Center is the federal doorway for flood maps. Pair the two: check the map, then call the local code office with the parcel address before filling, building, rebuilding, or changing a basement or accessory structure.
This is not a verdict that a property is unsafe. It is a way to keep a real permit question from getting buried under guesses, especially where one road crosses town and village lines.
Bring photos, a sketch, the address, and the work description. In Broome, the right answer can change by municipality, so the local code office is part of the property story. A small call early can keep the project from turning into a much bigger fix.
That is a very Broome County kind of check: river-valley practical, local-office specific, and much better handled before a contractor is waiting.