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Guide / Sarasota and Manatee Wind Zones

Sarasota and Manatee County wind zones

Whether you need impact-rated openings in Sarasota or Manatee County comes down to the wind maps and the building code, not guesswork. This guide explains the wind-borne debris region, the design wind speeds along this coast, and what the Florida Building Code requires, then shows you how to look up the exact figure for your own address. It is the code geography behind every impact-window decision here.

The code in force

Florida builds to the Florida Building Code, 8th Edition (2023), whose wind provisions follow the ASCE 7-22 standard, using a three-second gust wind speed at Risk Category II for a typical home. That framework sets the design pressures a window or door must resist, and it defines where opening protection is mandatory. It is a statewide code with local wind values, which is why two homes a few miles apart can face different requirements.

The wind-borne debris region

The key line for openings is the wind-borne debris region. Under the code, an area is in it where the ultimate design wind speed is 140 mph or greater, or within one mile of the coast where it is 130 mph or greater. In the debris region, new construction and substantial renovations must use impact-rated glazing or approved shutters. Because design wind speeds across Sarasota and Manatee County are high, effectively all of both counties, coastal and inland, falls inside the region. That is the single fact that drives most of the demand for impact windows here.

Design wind speed on this coast

Ultimate design wind speeds through Sarasota and Manatee County run in the range of roughly 150 mph, rising toward the immediate coast and barrier islands and easing somewhat inland. That is a range, not a fixed county number, because the value is read from the wind maps at a specific location. Do not print a single figure on a permit or a contract from memory: look up the address on the ASCE Hazard Tool, or confirm it with the county building department, before relying on it.

Not a High Velocity Hurricane Zone

A common mix-up: the High Velocity Hurricane Zone, with its whole-envelope impact rules, is only Miami-Dade and Broward counties. Sarasota and Manatee are wind-borne debris counties but not High Velocity zones, so products here need a Florida Product Approval or a Miami-Dade NOA and must meet the debris-region opening requirements, without the extra High Velocity envelope rules. See ratings explained for what those approvals mean.

The 2002 dividing line, and your city

Florida's first statewide building code took effect in 2002, so homes built before it usually predate modern opening protection and commonly carry non-impact glass. That pre-code stock is exactly why older neighborhoods are strong retrofit markets and newer ones are more about upgrades. Each city has its own housing-age and permit picture: see Sarasota, Venice, North Port, or the full service areas list, and the savings guide for the payback.

Questions

Frequently asked questions

What is the wind-borne debris region?

It is the part of Florida where the building code requires impact-rated openings or approved shutters. Under the code, an area qualifies where the ultimate design wind speed is 140 mph or greater, or within one mile of the coast where it is 130 mph or greater. Most of Sarasota and Manatee County falls inside it.

What is the design wind speed here?

Along this stretch of the Gulf coast, ultimate design wind speeds run in the range of roughly 150 mph, higher right at the water and lower moving inland. The exact figure for a specific address is set by the ASCE 7 wind maps, so look it up on the ASCE Hazard Tool rather than assuming a single number for the county.

Are Sarasota and Manatee in the High Velocity Hurricane Zone?

No. The High Velocity Hurricane Zone is only Miami-Dade and Broward counties, where the whole building envelope must be impact-rated. Sarasota and Manatee are wind-borne debris counties but not High Velocity zones, so products here need a Florida Product Approval or a Miami-Dade NOA and must meet the debris-region opening rules.

Does the code apply to inland homes too?

Often yes. Because design wind speeds across both counties are high enough, even inland communities like North Port and Lakewood Ranch fall in the wind-borne debris region. Distance from the coast does not automatically exempt a home. Confirm your address on the ASCE Hazard Tool or with the county building department.

Why does the year my home was built matter?

Floridas first statewide building code took effect in 2002, and homes built before it usually predate the modern opening-protection requirements, so they commonly have non-impact glass. That pre-code stock is the core retrofit market and the reason upgrading both improves safety and unlocks the insurance credit.

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