The extreme flood event of July 14/15, 2021 caused massive geomorphological changes along the Ahr river in western Germany. The processes include mass movement and bank erosion, channel displacement and widening and deposition of material at the floodplains, all of which contributed to extreme damage. With the aim of gaining a more comprehensive understanding of the factors controlling these processes, spatial patterns of geomorphological changes on a regional scale are analyzed. A differential terrain model (DoD), calculated from digital terrain models (DTM) collected before and after the event using airborne laser scanning (ALS), serves as the data basis. The course of the river is divided into 120 m wide and 100 m long segments. Analyzing the cumulated volumetric loss per segment, which represents the explained variable proxying spatial variability in flood power, is conducted by using a multiple linear regression model. The independent variables considered in this investigation include peak discharge, valley floor width and river curvature. Both the native data and the residuals of the regression model are used to examine effects of bridge failure and subsequent outburst waves on volumetric loss. The analysis shows that the strongest geomorphological changes are associated with high peak discharge and a small valley floor width. River segments containing destroyed arch bridges show higher volumetric loss values than segments with destroyed slab bridges, intact bridges or no bridge at all. These findings provide slight evidence that there are construction types more appropriate than traditional arch bridges to prevent local augmentation of flood power caused by outburst waves resulting from bridge clogging and failure.