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Water Damage Repair Process Guide

What happens after mitigation, how to plan the rebuild, and common mistakes that delay insurance claims and completion. Lexington, KY.

January 26, 2026 7 min read | Bluegrass Finish
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Water Damage Repair Process Guide

Water damage repair happens in two phases: mitigation (stopping the water and drying) and rebuild (replacing damaged materials). Understanding this process helps you plan repairs, work with insurance, and avoid costly mistakes that delay completion.

Phase 1: Mitigation (Not Repair)

Stop the water source:

  • Shut off water supply if plumbing leak
  • Tarp roof if storm damage
  • Fix broken appliance connection
  • Rebuild cannot start until source is fixed

Extract standing water:

  • Professional water extraction equipment
  • Remove wet carpet, pad, and porous materials
  • Typically happens within 24-48 hours

Dry the structure:

  • Industrial fans and dehumidifiers
  • Moisture meters monitor progress
  • Takes 3-7 days depending on extent
  • Cannot rush this step

Why Drying Matters

Rebuilding wet materials causes:

  • Mold growth within 48-72 hours
  • Continued rot and structural degradation
  • Odor problems that persist
  • Insurance may deny claim if not properly dried
  • Future warranty issues

Proper drying means:

  • Moisture meter readings below 15% for wood
  • Concrete slabs below 4-5% moisture
  • All hidden cavities checked (wall cavities, under cabinets)
  • Professional mitigation company provides drying log

Phase 2: Rebuild (After Drying)

Typical water damage rebuild scope:

  1. Remove remaining damaged materials
  2. Inspect for hidden damage (mold, rot)
  3. Treat/seal affected framing
  4. Replace insulation if wet
  5. Install new drywall
  6. Replace flooring
  7. Reinstall baseboards and trim
  8. Prime and paint
  9. Reinstall fixtures if removed

Timeline after drying complete:

  • Small bathroom (one room): 1-2 weeks
  • Multiple rooms: 2-4 weeks
  • Whole-floor damage: 4-8 weeks

Common Water Damage Scenarios

Toilet overflow / plumbing leak:

  • Damage typically localized to one room
  • Subfloor often affected if water sat
  • Check adjacent rooms/lower floors
  • May need mold remediation if slow leak

Washing machine supply line failure:

  • Can dump 5-10 gallons per minute
  • Often affects multiple rooms
  • Subfloor and framing damage common
  • Lower-floor ceiling damage likely

Roof leak during storm:

  • Damage concentrated below leak path
  • May affect ceilings, walls, insulation
  • Check attic for mold and rot
  • Roof must be repaired first

Basement flooding:

  • Concrete doesn’t dry quickly
  • Mold risk very high
  • May require mold-resistant rebuild
  • Address drainage/waterproofing cause

Working with Insurance

Document everything:

  • Photos before cleanup
  • Photos after mitigation
  • Keep all receipts
  • Mitigation log from drying company
  • Contractor estimates

Insurance typically covers:

  • Sudden, accidental water events (burst pipes, appliance failures)
  • Mitigation costs (drying, water extraction)
  • Rebuild to “like kind and quality”
  • Contents loss if applicable

Insurance usually does NOT cover:

  • Long-term slow leaks
  • Flooding from external sources (need flood insurance)
  • Negligence or lack of maintenance
  • Upgrades beyond original materials

Work with adjuster:

  • Provide detailed scope and estimates
  • Point out all damage, including hidden
  • Ask questions if denial or low estimate
  • Consider independent adjuster if needed

Mold Remediation

When is mold remediation needed?

  • Visible mold growth
  • Musty odor persists after drying
  • Water sat for more than 48 hours
  • Hidden areas not dried promptly

Remediation process:

  • Containment (plastic barriers, negative air)
  • HEPA vacuuming
  • Cleaning or removing affected materials
  • Anti-microbial treatment
  • Air scrubbing
  • Post-remediation testing

Cost: $1,500-$10,000+ depending on extent

Insurance: May cover mold if part of covered water damage claim

Mold-Resistant Rebuild Options

Mold-resistant drywall:

  • Purple board or green board
  • Moisture-resistant core and face paper
  • Recommended for bathrooms, laundry, basements
  • Slight cost increase ($0.50-1/sheet)

Moisture-resistant underlayment:

  • For LVP, laminate, and tile flooring
  • Prevents future moisture wicking
  • Required by some flooring warranties

Anti-microbial primers:

  • Seal studs and framing before drywall
  • Prevent future mold growth
  • Recommended after any water event

Insurance often approves upgraded materials after water damage

Subfloor Damage and Repair

Subfloor damage indicators:

  • Soft, spongy feeling when walking
  • Visible swelling or delamination
  • Staining or discoloration
  • Musty odor

Repair options:

  • Localized replacement: cut out damaged section, sister in new
  • Full sheet replacement: if damage extensive
  • Add second layer: if first layer compromised but stable
  • Leveling compound: if swelling caused unevenness

Do not install new flooring over damaged subfloor - it will fail

Drywall Replacement After Water Damage

How high to cut:

  • Standard: 12-24” above visible water line
  • May need higher if wicking occurred
  • Open wall cavity to check insulation and framing

Partial vs. full sheets:

  • Partial: cost-effective but seams visible
  • Full sheets: cleaner finish, better for insurance photos
  • Horizontal seams easier to hide at 48” height

Texture matching:

  • Smooth walls: easier to patch
  • Orange peel: moderate difficulty
  • Knockdown/heavy texture: harder to match
  • Popcorn: nearly impossible to match perfectly

Painting After Water Damage

Stain blocking essential:

  • Use shellac-based or oil-based primer
  • Blocks water stains and odor
  • Required on any water-stained areas
  • Do not skip—water stains will bleed through latex paint

Two coats minimum:

  • Prime + two finish coats for best coverage
  • Match existing paint sheen
  • Feather edges into existing paint

Timeline from Water Event to Completion

Day 1: Water extraction and emergency services Days 2-7: Drying process (fans, dehumidifiers, monitoring) Day 7-10: Post-drying inspection, scope finalized Week 2: Demolition and mold remediation (if needed) Week 3-4: Framing repairs, subfloor work, drywall installed Week 4-5: Drywall finishing, priming, painting Week 5-6: Flooring, trim, fixtures reinstalled

Total: 5-6 weeks for typical multi-room water damage

Delays happen when:

  • Drying not completed properly (restart required)
  • Mold discovered during demolition (remediation added)
  • Insurance disputes over scope
  • Material lead times (specialty items)
  • Contractor scheduling

Common Mistakes That Delay Repairs

Mistake 1: Rushing the drying process

  • Mold grows, requires expensive remediation
  • Insurance may deny claim
  • Work has to be redone

Mistake 2: Not documenting damage thoroughly

  • Insurance lowballs estimate
  • Additional damage found later not covered

Mistake 3: Skipping mold-resistant materials

  • Future mold problems not covered by insurance
  • More expensive to fix later

Mistake 4: Painting over stains without primer

  • Stains bleed through, need repainting
  • Odors persist

Mistake 5: Installing flooring over damaged subfloor

  • Flooring fails quickly
  • Have to remove and redo

Red Flags (Get a Second Opinion)

  • Contractor wants to start before drying is complete
  • No moisture meter readings provided
  • Painting without stain-blocking primer
  • Installing flooring without checking subfloor
  • Skipping mold remediation when musty odor present
  • No insurance documentation process

Questions to Ask Contractors

  1. How do you confirm the structure is dry before rebuild?
  2. Do you provide documentation for insurance?
  3. What primers do you use for water stains?
  4. Do you recommend mold-resistant materials?
  5. How do you handle additional damage found during demolition?
  6. What is your warranty on water damage repairs?
  7. Are you experienced with insurance claims?

Water damage repair is a two-phase process: mitigation first, rebuild second. Never rush the drying phase, document everything for insurance, and use mold-resistant materials to prevent future problems. A properly repaired water damage claim leaves no lasting trace—no odors, no stains, no mold, and no structural compromise.

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