Restoration Services Providers
The providers compiled within this network identify water mitigation and restoration contractors operating across the United States, organized to support property owners, adjusters, and facility managers in locating verified service providers. Each entry reflects a defined scope of service types, geographic coverage, and credential status drawn from publicly available licensing and certification records. Understanding how these providers are structured helps users draw accurate comparisons between providers and avoid mismatches between a contractor's actual capabilities and a property's remediation needs. For context on the broader purpose of this resource, see the restoration services provider network purpose and scope page.
What each provider covers
Every provider in this network is built around a discrete contractor profile that captures the operational and regulatory footprint of a single business entity. Providers are not endorsements; they are structured reference entries that aggregate publicly documented attributes.
The core data points captured in each provider include:
- Business name and legal entity type — sole proprietorship, LLC, corporation, or franchise affiliate
- Primary service category — whether the contractor operates in residential, commercial, or both segments (see residential water mitigation services and commercial water mitigation services for category definitions)
- Water damage classification competency — the range of water damage categories and classes the contractor is equipped to handle, from Category 1 clean-water losses through Category 3 grossly contaminated events
- Certifications held — IICRC credentials including WRT (Water Restoration Technician), ASD (Applied Structural Drying), and CDS (Commercial Drying Specialist), verified against the IICRC's public credential lookup
- State licensing status — based on contractor license records in states where water mitigation work triggers a general contractor, specialty contractor, or mold remediation license requirement
- Equipment capacity indicators — approximate fleet size or drying equipment inventory where publicly disclosed, relevant to large-loss and commercial water mitigation services
Providers do not substitute for direct contractor verification. Credential expiration dates and license status change; users are responsible for confirming active standing at the point of engagement.
Geographic distribution
Providers span all 50 states and Washington D.C., with density weighted toward metropolitan statistical areas where water damage claim volume is highest. The distribution is not uniform: coastal and flood-prone states including Florida, Texas, Louisiana, and South Carolina carry higher provider counts than inland states with lower annual precipitation and fewer regulated floodplain zones.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) designates Special Flood Hazard Areas under the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), and a disproportionate share of verified contractors operate in counties where FEMA flood zone designations (Zone A, AE, or VE) create sustained demand for flood water mitigation considerations. FEMA's Flood Map Service Center is the authoritative source for zone classifications.
State licensing frameworks also affect provider eligibility. As of the most recent legislative cycles reviewed, at least 36 states require some form of contractor license for water damage or mold-related work, though the triggering thresholds and license categories differ by jurisdiction. Contractors operating in states with mold remediation licensing statutes — including Texas (regulated under the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation) and Florida (regulated under Chapter 468, Florida Statutes) — must carry the applicable license to appear in state-specific filtered views. For a detailed breakdown of state-level requirements, see water mitigation contractor licensing requirements.
How to read an entry
Each contractor entry is formatted in a standardized block. Reading the entry from top to bottom moves from identity fields to operational fields to verification fields.
Identity block: Business name, primary phone, and service area counties or zip-code radius. Service area is self-reported by the contractor and cross-referenced against licensing jurisdiction records where available.
Operational block: Service types are coded using four primary tags — Emergency Response, Structural Drying, Contents Handling, and Specialty (which covers sewage backup mitigation services and category-3 water damage mitigation). A contractor carrying all four tags has documented capability across the full mitigation workflow. A contractor carrying only Emergency Response and Structural Drying may not offer contents pack-out during water mitigation or antimicrobial application services.
Verification block: Lists the certification body, credential type, and the public registry where the credential can be independently confirmed. The IICRC S500 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration is the benchmark document referenced when assessing whether a contractor's stated methodology aligns with industry consensus procedures. IICRC credential verification is available through the IICRC's own consumer lookup tool at iicrc.org.
What providers include and exclude
Included:
- Licensed contractors offering active water mitigation services as a primary or secondary line of business
- Franchise operators affiliated with national restoration networks (verified as individual location entities, not as the parent brand)
- Contractors holding at minimum one active IICRC water-category credential
- Entities with a verifiable physical business address within the verified service state
Excluded:
- General contractors who perform drying work only as incidental to reconstruction — those firms are not classified as mitigation specialists
- Contractors whose state license has lapsed or whose IICRC credentials have expired without documented renewal
- Public adjusters, insurance agents, and third-party administrators — the distinction between mitigation contractors and third-party administrator water mitigation roles is maintained throughout this provider network
- Remediation-only firms focused exclusively on mold abatement or asbestos removal without a water mitigation service line
The distinction between mitigation and remediation is operationally significant. As explained in detail at water mitigation vs remediation, mitigation arrests ongoing damage and stabilizes the structure, while remediation addresses the biological or chemical consequences of prior damage. Providers in this network are scoped to mitigation-capable entities; remediation-only providers fall outside the classification boundary used here.