Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Series: Tinbergen Institute Discussion Papers Creation-Date: 2025-06-26 Number: 25-040/IV Author-Name: Lukas Hofmann Author-Workplace-Name: University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute Author-Name: Martijn Dröes Author-Workplace-Name: University of Amsterdam Author-Name: Marc Francke Author-Workplace-Name: University of Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute Title: Sinking Land, Sinking Prices? Land Subsidence, Flood Risk, and Property Prices Abstract: This paper examines the effect of land subsidence -- the gradual sinking of the Earth's surface -- on property values. Subsidence can negatively affect real estate by damaging building foundations and increasing vulnerability to flooding. Using detailed property transaction data from the Netherlands, combined with high-resolution geospatial data on both current and projected subsidence and flood risk, we find that properties currently experiencing subsidence sell at a 0.8% discount when built on foundations susceptible to damage. Additionally, flood-prone properties projected to experience future subsidence sell for 1.5% less. Compared to the actual costs and occurrence of these risks, our findings suggest that homeowners tend to underestimate the risks associated with foundation damage while overestimating the threat of future flooding. Classification-JEL: G10, Q54, R30 Keywords: Land subsidence, property prices, climate risk, risk perception File-URL: https://papers.tinbergen.nl/25040.pdf File-Format: application/pdf File-Size: 12.220.355 bytes Handle: RePEc:tin:wpaper:20250040