This document presents a methodology to assess the influence of sea level rise on storm-induced coastal flooding and erosion. It develops a quasi-dynamic approach that considers the coastal response to sea level rise, such as beach profile adaptation, in addition to the traditional static approach. The methodology is applied to the Tordera delta in Spain under different climate scenarios. The results show that accounting for the coastal response reduces the effects of sea level rise on inundation and erosion hazards compared to the static approach. In particular, the reduction is more evident for developed coasts at shorter time horizons when sea level rise induced retreat is small relative to available accommodation space.