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:
- Remove remaining damaged materials
- Inspect for hidden damage (mold, rot)
- Treat/seal affected framing
- Replace insulation if wet
- Install new drywall
- Replace flooring
- Reinstall baseboards and trim
- Prime and paint
- 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
- How do you confirm the structure is dry before rebuild?
- Do you provide documentation for insurance?
- What primers do you use for water stains?
- Do you recommend mold-resistant materials?
- How do you handle additional damage found during demolition?
- What is your warranty on water damage repairs?
- 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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