What counts as storm damage water versus a regular leak?
Storm water is almost always classified as Category 3 under the IICRC S500 standard, meaning it is grossly contaminated. It can carry soil bacteria, pesticides, sewage from overwhelmed municipal lines, fuel residue from streets, and rodent waste. A pipe leak under your sink is usually Category 1, clean water, and you can often dry the materials in place. Storm flooding rarely allows that. Porous materials that absorbed contaminated water, such as carpet pad, drywall below the water line, insulation, and particleboard cabinetry, typically need to be removed and replaced rather than dried. That is not us upselling you. That is the published standard insurance adjusters reference when they review claims in New Augusta.
How fast do you need to start cleanup after a New Augusta storm?
You have a 24 to 48 hour window before mold colonies start establishing on damp organic materials. In summer humidity, that window shrinks. We recommend you call within the first 2 to 4 hours if there is standing water of any depth. Extraction first, then demolition of unsalvageable materials, then drying with commercial dehumidifiers and air movers. A typical New Augusta basement with two inches of storm water takes 3 to 5 days of active drying after extraction and demo. We monitor moisture daily with penetrating and non-penetrating meters and document readings for your claim. You can read more about our process on our storm damage service page.
Speed also matters for cost containment. Every additional day water sits inside wall cavities increases the footage of drywall we have to cut, the linear feet of baseboard we have to pull, and the volume of insulation we have to bag out. A call placed at hour 3 often saves a homeowner thousands compared to the same loss called in at hour 36. If you cannot reach New Augusta Water Restoration immediately, start by moving electronics and furniture off wet flooring and opening interior doors to promote airflow.
What does storm flood cleanup actually cost in New Augusta?
Honest ranges: a partially flooded basement under 500 square feet with Category 3 water typically runs 3,000 to 7,500 dollars for extraction, demo, antimicrobial treatment, and structural drying. A fully flooded basement of 1,000 to 1,500 square feet often lands between 8,000 and 18,000 dollars. Whole-home first-floor flooding from a major storm can exceed 25,000 dollars before any rebuild work. These numbers cover mitigation, not reconstruction of drywall, flooring, and trim. Most New Augusta homeowners insurance policies cover sudden storm-driven water intrusion from wind-created openings, but standard policies do not cover surface flooding from rising groundwater. That requires separate NFIP flood insurance. For a deeper breakdown by category and square footage, see our water damage restoration cost guide.
What about the basement specifically?
Basements are the most common storm flood loss we handle in New Augusta. Sump pump failure, foundation seepage, window well overflow, and sewer backup all hit the lowest point of your house first. The cleanup sequence is the same regardless of source: power isolation, extraction, controlled demolition of saturated porous materials, HEPA air scrubbing, antimicrobial application, structural drying, and post-remediation verification. If sewage is involved, we follow the IICRC S520 protocols for biohazard remediation. Our basement flooding page details the equipment we stage on a typical job, usually 4 to 8 air movers, 1 to 2 LGR dehumidifiers, and a HEPA scrubber per affected room.
Can you save hardwood floors after storm flooding?
Sometimes. Solid hardwood that was wet for less than 24 hours and dried aggressively with mat systems and dehumidifiers can occasionally be saved, though some cupping and color change is normal. Engineered hardwood almost never survives Category 3 water because the layered construction delaminates. Laminate flooring is always a loss once water reaches the core. We will give you a straight read within the first visit. If we think there is a 30 percent chance of saving your floors, we will tell you that number so you can make the call with your insurance.
What about furniture, electronics, and personal belongings?
Upholstered furniture that absorbed Category 3 water is almost always a loss because the foam and frame cannot be effectively decontaminated. Solid wood furniture with non-porous finishes can often be cleaned, dried, and returned to service. Electronics that were submerged should not be powered on, even after they appear dry, because trace corrosion on circuit boards causes failures weeks later. We inventory damaged contents room by room with photos and serial numbers when possible, then provide that list to your adjuster. Sentimental items like photo albums and documents can sometimes be salvaged through freeze-drying if you act within 48 hours.
Will my homeowners insurance pay for this?
It depends on how the water entered. Wind drove rain through a damaged roof or broken window? Usually covered. A tree fell and opened the structure? Covered. Sewer backed up because city lines overwhelmed during the storm? Only if you carry a sewer backup endorsement, which many New Augusta policies do not include by default. Groundwater seeping through foundation walls or rising up through floor drains during heavy rain? Generally excluded from standard policies and only covered under NFIP flood insurance. We document everything with moisture maps, photos, and category classifications so your adjuster sees the same evidence we see. We do not write your claim, but we make sure the facts are clear.
Is flood water actually dangerous to walk through?
Yes, more than people realize. Beyond the contamination already mentioned, storm flooding inside a structure can hide submerged outlets, energized cords, and tripping hazards. If water has reached any outlet, switch, or appliance, shut off the breaker for that area before entering. Wear rubber boots if you must walk through it. Do not run a shop vac plugged into a wet circuit. If your sump pump failed during the storm and water rose above the panel, call a licensed electrician before re-energizing. Our crews carry non-contact voltage testers and isolate hazards before extraction begins.
The health risks linger after the water is gone. Aerosolized contaminants from saturated materials can trigger respiratory issues, skin irritation, and gastrointestinal symptoms for days. We ask homeowners with young children, elderly family members, or anyone immunocompromised to stay out of the affected area until containment and HEPA filtration are running. If you have already walked through standing flood water, wash exposed skin with soap and warm water and launder clothing separately on the hottest setting the fabric allows.
How long until my New Augusta property is fully restored?
Mitigation, meaning extraction through drying, runs 3 to 7 days for most residential storm losses. Reconstruction, meaning drywall, flooring, paint, and trim replacement, adds another 2 to 6 weeks depending on scope and material availability. Commercial properties often move faster on mitigation but slower on rebuild due to permit and tenant coordination. We give you a written timeline at the start, update it daily, and flag any changes in writing so there are no surprises when your adjuster reviews the file.