Water Damage Repair Cost Guide
Cost depends heavily on how much water, how long it sat, and what materials were affected. Here’s a general breakdown to help you know what to expect before a crew gives you a firm quote.
What drives the cost up or down
- Category of water — clean water (like a supply line) costs less to remediate than contaminated water (sewage backup).
- How long it sat — water left unaddressed for more than 24-48 hours often leads to mold growth, which adds remediation cost.
- Materials affected — drywall and carpet are cheaper to replace than hardwood floors, cabinetry, or subfloor.
- Square footage — a single bathroom leak costs far less to resolve than a whole-floor flood.
General cost ranges
Minor water damage (a small area, caught quickly) tends to be at the lower end of the scale — often a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars. Moderate damage involving drywall, flooring, and drying equipment for several days typically runs into the low-to-mid thousands. Severe damage — structural drying, mold remediation, and reconstruction — can run significantly higher. Get a written, itemized quote from the crew you’re connected with before agreeing to work; costs vary a lot by contractor and situation.
Ways to keep costs down
Acting within the first few hours is the single biggest cost factor you can control — it limits how far water spreads and reduces the chance mold takes hold, which is usually the most expensive part of a delayed response.
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