Water Damage · Answered
How to Choose a Water Damage Restoration Company in Las Vegas
Quality 1st Restoration
The short answer
Choose a water damage restoration company by verifying IICRC certification, confirming it is licensed and insured, and checking that it offers 24/7 response and handles the full job. Certification separates a real restoration company from a fly-by-night operator.
There are a lot of restoration companies in the Las Vegas Valley. Drive around Henderson after a bad storm and you’ll see the trucks. The problem is that most homeowners have no idea how to tell the good ones apart from the bad ones, and by the time water is running across the floor, nobody has time to research. So they call the first number that pops up and hope for the best.
That’s how people end up with a crew that pulls up soaked baseboards, points a couple of fans at the wall, and disappears. Two months later there’s mold behind the drywall and a fight with the insurance company nobody wanted.
You can avoid all of that. It comes down to knowing what to look for before you hand over your house.
How do I choose a water damage restoration company?
Start with proof, not promises. A good water damage restoration company can show you IICRC certification, a valid business license, and current insurance. It answers the phone at 2 a.m. because water doesn’t wait for business hours. And it can carry the job from the first extraction all the way through the rebuild, so you’re not hiring three different companies to fix one leak.
Here’s the part nobody tells you: in Nevada, the only thing the law makes a restoration company get is a business license. Not a single certification. That’s the whole bar. Anyone with a license can print a magnet, stick it on a truck, and call themselves a restoration company tomorrow.
The law only requires a business license to operate a restoration company in Nevada. It does not require any water damage certification. That means the burden is on you, the homeowner, to check credentials the state never will.
What certifications should a water damage restoration company have?
This is the real dividing line. A serious company carries IICRC certifications for the work it actually does. For water damage that means the water damage restoration credential, plus mold remediation, plus smoke and odor if fire is ever part of the picture. Quality 1st Restoration holds all of those and more, which is exactly what separates a real restoration company from a fly-by-night operator.
Why does the paper matter? Because water damage is a science, not a chore. Certified techs know how to read a moisture meter, find water you can’t see behind cabinets and under flooring, and dry a structure to the right target so it doesn’t rot or grow mold later. The IICRC writes the industry standards that professional restorers are trained and tested against.(1)
Mold certification matters just as much in our climate. Get the drying wrong and you’re not looking at a stain, you’re looking at a health problem. The EPA is blunt about it: if you have a mold problem, you have to fix the moisture problem first, or the mold comes right back.(2)
"The IICRC is the certification and standard-setting non-profit organization for the inspection, cleaning, and restoration industries. It sets the standards for the restoration industry and provides training and certification to businesses and technicians."
— IICRC (1)Do water damage restoration companies need a license?
By law, they need a business license, and that’s it. Certification is voluntary. There is no state rule that forces a restoration company to prove it knows how to dry a house before it works on yours.
So flip that around. If certification is optional and a company went out and earned it anyway, that tells you something about how they run their business. They spent the time and money to train their crew when nobody made them. The ones cutting corners on your job are usually the same ones who never bothered to get certified in the first place. When you interview a company, ask two questions: are you licensed and insured, and can I see your IICRC certifications? The insurance part protects you if a worker gets hurt or something in your home gets damaged during the work.
What is IICRC certification?
IICRC stands for the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification. It’s the nonprofit that writes the standards the restoration industry follows and then trains and tests technicians against them. When a company is IICRC certified, its people have studied how water moves through building materials, how to measure moisture, and how to dry a structure correctly instead of eyeballing it.
Think of it like this. The business license says the company is allowed to take your money. The IICRC certification says they actually know what they’re doing once they’re inside your home. Those are two very different things, and only one of them is required by law.
How do I avoid a bad restoration company?
Slow down for sixty seconds before you hire, even in an emergency. A few quick checks weed out most of the bad ones.
- Ask for IICRC certification by name. A real company answers without hesitating. A fly-by-night gets vague or changes the subject.
- Confirm licensed and insured, and ask to see it. No proof, no job.
- Check that they run 24/7 emergency response. Water spreads fast, and a company that can’t come out tonight costs you more in damage by morning.
- Look at local reputation. Read the reviews, ask for references, and see whether the company actually works here in the Valley or just chases storms through town.
- Make sure they get you a clear estimate and can explain what the work involves before they start ripping things out.
One more thing that saves people real money: hire a company that can do the whole job. Some outfits only handle the wet part and leave you to find a separate contractor for repairs. A full-service restoration company handles the emergency water cleanup and repair up front, deals with any mold that shows up once walls are opened, and then puts your home back together with build-back services so you’re working with one team from start to finish.
That same experience matters when the bill comes. A seasoned company has worked with adjusters hundreds of times and knows how to document the loss. Our insurance claim assistance exists for exactly that reason, so the paperwork doesn’t land entirely on you while you’re already dealing with a flooded house.
If you want to understand what you’re actually dealing with before you call anyone, it helps to know the different categories of water damage, since clean water and sewage are not treated the same way. And if cost is your first worry, our breakdown of what water damage restoration costs walks through the numbers.
The short version: don’t just hire the first truck you see. Hire the company that can prove it’s certified, licensed, insured, and ready around the clock. That’s the difference between a home dried the right way and a mold problem you’ll be chasing for years. See how we approach it on our Henderson water damage restoration page.
Water doesn’t wait, and neither do we. Call Quality 1st Restoration any time, day or night, at 888-453-3591.
Water still spreading? Every hour it sits, the repair gets bigger.
Quality 1st Restoration answers 24 / 7 / 365 across Henderson and the Las Vegas Valley.
888-453-3591