Water Damage Insurance Claims, Made Simple
A water damage insurance claim is straightforward when it is documented properly from the start. The carrier needs to see what happened, when it happened, what was damaged, what was done about it, and what each piece of work cost. When that documentation exists in proper form — moisture readings, photos, equipment logs, line-item invoicing — the claim moves quickly. When it does not, the claim stalls and the homeowner ends up arguing with the adjuster months later.
The most common mistake homeowners make is paying the restoration contractor out of pocket and then submitting receipts to the carrier for reimbursement. That works, but it puts the financial risk on the homeowner — if the carrier disputes the scope or the cost, you have already paid. Direct billing reverses this. The contractor bills the carrier directly under an Assignment of Benefits or work authorization. You pay only the deductible. The carrier and contractor work out the rest.
Our partner pros run claims this way as the default. The crew that arrives at your home on a water emergency has done hundreds of carrier-billed jobs. They know what each major NY carrier wants to see in the claim file, and they prepare it as the work is being done — not as an afterthought.
How the Claims Process Works
A typical water-damage claim moves through five stages. The whole process can run from one week (small loss, simple insurance carrier) to several weeks (large loss, larger scope of rebuild).
- Call us first. The moment we arrive on site, the documentation begins. Photos before any cleanup. Moisture readings on every wall. Notes on the source of the loss. This minute-one documentation is what an adjuster will want to see, and capturing it before any disturbance happens makes the claim defensible. Same day, you call your carrier to open the claim — usually a five-minute phone call to provide your policy number and a brief description of the loss.
- Assessment and moisture mapping. The crew uses thermal imaging and pin moisture meters to map the full extent of the loss — including water trapped behind walls and under floors that is not visible. This map becomes part of the scope of work the carrier sees. Without it, the scope is just guesswork.
- Claim filed with the carrier. The contractor submits the scope of work, the documented loss, and the proposed estimate to the adjuster. For most major carriers, this is electronic and turns around within 24 to 48 hours. The adjuster may schedule a call or a visit to verify the scope.
- Work performed with daily documentation. Equipment logs, moisture readings, daily progress photos, and any change-orders go into the claim file as the work proceeds. Most water-damage jobs run 5 to 14 days from arrival to final walk-through.
- Direct billing. The final invoice is itemized line by line — labor, equipment time, materials, disposal, antimicrobial treatment, rebuild. It is submitted to the carrier with all supporting documentation. You pay your deductible to the contractor. The carrier pays the balance directly.
Insurance Carriers We Work With
Our partner contractors are approved or preferred restoration vendors for most of the major carriers writing homeowner policies in Suffolk County. Direct-billing relationships are in place with each of the carriers below — meaning the claims process is already familiar to both sides and moves faster as a result.
- State Farm
- Allstate
- Liberty Mutual
- Travelers
- Nationwide
- USAA
- Geico
- Progressive
- Farmers
- Chubb
- The Hartford
- And many others
What's Covered (and What's Not)
Coverage decisions hinge on the source of the water. The general rules are consistent across most major carriers in NY, but every policy has its own exclusions and riders — read yours, or have it read for you.
Generally Covered
- Burst pipes and supply line failures. Sudden and accidental — the textbook covered loss.
- Appliance ruptures. Washing machines, dishwashers, water heaters, refrigerator ice makers, hot water heaters.
- Storm damage from above. Roof leaks during a hurricane or Nor'easter, ice-dam intrusion, wind-driven rain through a damaged window.
- Overflow events. Bathtub left running, toilet overflow from a clog (clean side of the bowl).
- Fire department water damage. Water used to put out a fire is covered as part of the fire loss.
Generally Not Covered
- Gradual leaks. A slow drip under a sink that went unnoticed for months is treated as a maintenance issue. Carriers will often pay to repair the resulting damage if you find it within a reasonable window, but a year-old slow leak with mold is usually denied.
- Flood damage from rising surface water. Storm surge, river overflow, flash flooding, and ground saturation are all excluded. Requires NFIP or private flood coverage. See our flood cleanup page.
- Sewage backup (without a rider). Most policies exclude this by default. A sewage-backup or "water and sewer backup" rider, usually $25 to $75 a year, adds it back. See sewage cleanup.
- Damage to unoccupied homes with the heat off. Some policies exclude burst-pipe damage if the home was vacant for an extended period without maintained heat. Check your specific policy if you have a vacation property.
- Mold remediation beyond the policy cap. Most policies cap mold coverage at $5,000 to $10,000 per claim. Larger remediation jobs come out of pocket above that cap.
Read your declarations page or call your agent to check the specific exclusions and riders on your policy. The differences between carriers — and between policies from the same carrier — are bigger than most homeowners realize.
Documentation We Provide
The documentation our partner crews assemble for every claim is what makes the difference between a fast-paid claim and a disputed one. Every job file includes:
- Initial assessment photos — wide shots and close-ups of every affected room before any work begins.
- Moisture readings — surface and material readings on every wall, floor, and ceiling, mapped to a floor plan.
- Equipment logs — daily records of which units (air movers, dehumidifiers) were running where, and for how long.
- Daily progress photos — visual record of the drying process and any demolition or rebuild work.
- Itemized scope of work — what is being done, in what order, and why each step is necessary.
- Line-item invoicing — labor hours, equipment time, materials, disposal fees, antimicrobial application, all priced separately rather than as a lump sum.
- Completion certificate — final readings showing the structure is dry, signed off by the crew lead.
Tips for Filing a Successful Claim
- Call your insurance the same day. Most policies have language about prompt notification. Same-day notice closes any future argument about delay.
- Take photos before any cleanup. Even before you call us. Phone camera. Dozens of photos. The more, the better — extras are free, missing shots are not recoverable.
- Save damaged items if possible. Do not throw out wet belongings before the adjuster sees them. If they need to be moved out for the cleanup, document each item with photos and label them.
- Get everything in writing. Quotes, scope of work, what the adjuster says is covered. Email and text are documentation; verbal agreements are not.
- Use an experienced restoration contractor. A crew that has run hundreds of claims with your specific carrier knows exactly what the adjuster wants, exactly how to price each line item, and exactly which questions are about to be asked. That is much of why direct-billed claims close faster than reimbursement claims.
- Keep a single point of contact. One person from your household on the phone with the adjuster. One person from the contractor on the phone with the adjuster. Multiple voices on a claim file slow it down.
Filing a Water Damage Claim?
Call us before you call your insurance carrier — we'll guide you through the right way to start the claim.
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