Our 4-Step Water Damage Restoration Process
When water enters your home or business, every hour counts. Our IICRC-certified technicians follow a proven, systematic process to stop the damage, dry the structure, and restore your property to pre-loss condition.
Step 1: Assessment & Moisture Mapping
The moment our team arrives, we conduct a thorough inspection using thermal imaging cameras and professional-grade moisture meters. We map every affected area โ including inside walls, under floors, and in subfloor cavities โ so no hidden moisture is missed. This assessment drives the entire drying plan and documents conditions for your insurance adjuster.
Step 2: Water Extraction
We deploy truck-mounted and portable extraction units capable of removing hundreds of gallons of standing water per hour. For hardwood floors, crawl spaces, and tight areas, we use specialty extraction tools that pull water from places a standard wet-vac simply cannot reach. Speed here directly determines how much material can be saved versus replaced.
Step 3: Structural Drying & Dehumidification
Extraction removes bulk water, but moisture trapped inside drywall, insulation, and framing requires industrial air movers and low-grain refrigerant (LGR) dehumidifiers to fully eliminate. We place equipment strategically based on the moisture map and return daily to read moisture levels, adjust equipment positioning, and track progress toward industry-standard drying goals (IICRC S500). Most residential drying takes 3โ5 days; larger or heavily saturated structures may take longer.
Step 4: Restoration & Rebuilding
Once the structure is certified dry, restoration begins. This may include replacing drywall, installing new flooring, repainting, or full reconstruction of affected rooms. We handle all phases in-house โ you deal with one company, one point of contact, and one claim instead of coordinating separate contractors.
Common Causes of Water Damage We Handle
- Burst or frozen pipes โ often happen overnight or during winter travel
- Storm flooding and rising groundwater
- Appliance failures โ refrigerator lines, dishwashers, washing machines, water heaters
- Roof leaks and storm damage allowing water intrusion
- Sewage backups and drain overflows (Category 3 water โ requires special handling)
- HVAC condensate line overflows and drain pan failures
- Slab leaks beneath concrete foundations
- Toilet, sink, or tub overflows
Why Speed Matters: The 24โ48 Hour Mold Window
Water alone causes significant structural damage, but the secondary threat โ mold โ is what turns a recoverable loss into a major remediation project. Under the right conditions (warmth, humidity, organic material like wood or drywall), mold colonies can establish in as little as 24 to 48 hours. In the Carolinas, where summer humidity routinely exceeds 70%, that window can be even shorter.
Our goal is always to have extraction equipment on-site within two hours of your call. The faster we begin pulling moisture from the structure, the more material we save, and the less likely you are to face a separate mold remediation project down the road.
Professional Equipment We Use
- Truck-mounted and portable high-velocity water extractors
- Desiccant and LGR (low-grain refrigerant) commercial dehumidifiers
- Axial and centrifugal air movers for accelerated evaporation
- Thermal imaging cameras for hidden moisture detection
- Calibrated moisture meters and hygrometers for daily drying logs
- Injectidry and floor mat systems for hardwood and sub-floor drying
- HEPA air scrubbers when microbial growth is a concern
Insurance Claims โ We Handle the Paperwork
Dealing with insurance adjusters while your home is flooded is stressful. STOP Restoration of the Carolinas works directly with all major insurance carriers โ State Farm, Allstate, USAA, Travelers, Nationwide, and others. We document every affected area photographically and in writing, produce Xactimate estimates that adjusters recognize, and communicate directly with your carrier on your behalf so you can focus on your family instead of the claim.
We never require upfront payment. In most cases, payment flows directly from your insurer to us, and you are only responsible for your deductible. If you have questions about your coverage or the claims process, our team can walk you through it at no charge.
Water Damage Categories โ What You Need to Know
Not all water damage is equal. The IICRC classifies water by contamination level:
- Category 1 (Clean Water): From supply lines, rainwater, or melting snow. Lowest health risk. Standard drying protocol applies.
- Category 2 (Gray Water): From dishwashers, washing machines, or toilet overflow (urine only). Contains chemical or biological contaminants. Requires disinfection in addition to drying.
- Category 3 (Black Water): Sewage backups, flooding from rivers or storm drains. Highly contaminated. Requires full containment, PPE, antimicrobial treatment, and disposal of porous materials that cannot be safely cleaned.
Mishandling Category 2 or 3 water โ which is common in DIY attempts โ can spread contamination through a home and create lasting health hazards. Our certified technicians follow IICRC S500 protocols for each category, keeping your family safe throughout the process.
Serving All of NC and SC
We respond to water damage emergencies throughout the greater Charlotte metro area and surrounding regions, including Fort Mill, Rock Hill, Indian Land, Lancaster, Clover, Waxhaw, Matthews, Pineville, Gastonia, and beyond. If you're not sure whether we serve your area, call us โ if we can get there, we will.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does water damage drying take?
Most residential water damage dries in 3 to 5 days when equipment is deployed promptly. Factors that extend drying time include the amount of water, how deeply it penetrated building materials, humidity levels, and air circulation. Hardwood floors, concrete slabs, and multi-layer wall assemblies take longer than drywall alone. We monitor moisture levels daily and provide you with updated readings so you always know where things stand. We do not remove equipment until moisture meters confirm the structure has reached acceptable drying goals โ rushing this step is how secondary mold problems begin.
Do you work with homeowners insurance?
Yes โ we work with all major carriers and handle the documentation, estimates, and adjuster communication for you. Water damage from sudden and accidental events (burst pipes, appliance failures, storm intrusion) is typically covered by standard homeowners policies. Gradual leaks and flooding from outside the home may be treated differently depending on your policy. We can help you understand what your carrier is likely to cover before work begins, and we produce Xactimate estimates that adjusters recognize and accept without dispute in most cases.
What if the structure isn't dry after equipment is removed?
We never remove drying equipment until moisture readings confirm the structure meets IICRC S500 drying standards. Our technicians visit daily, log moisture levels, and adjust equipment placement as needed. If readings are not progressing as expected, we add capacity or investigate whether there is a continuing source of moisture (such as a slow leak that hasn't been fully repaired). You receive a copy of our drying logs at the conclusion of the job โ this documentation is important for your insurance file and provides proof that drying was completed properly.
What is the difference between water damage categories?
The IICRC classifies water by its contamination level. Category 1 is clean water from supply lines or rain โ lowest health risk. Category 2 (gray water) comes from appliances or toilet overflow and contains contaminants that require disinfection. Category 3 (black water) includes sewage, river flooding, and storm drain backup โ it is highly contaminated and requires full protective equipment, containment, and disposal of affected porous materials. Many people underestimate Category 2 and 3 situations and attempt DIY cleanup, which can spread contamination and create serious long-term health risks. If there's any doubt about the water source, treat it as the higher category.