Reviewed June 7, 2026

Water damage

Storm water damage

Storms can push water through roofs, windows, doors, foundations, and crawl space openings. The source should be separated from the damage.

Call (832) 305-9873
Water damage drying equipment in a home

Fast read

Storm Water Damage

Storm water damage needs both cleanup and source tracking. Drying the room helps, but the roof, window, door, grading, or crawl space entry point still needs attention.

Emergency check

Call now or wait?

Call now

  • standing water is inside the home
  • water is near outlets or electrical panels
  • more than one room is wet
  • water came through a ceiling
  • sewage or storm water may be involved

Can wait

  • a small clean-water leak was stopped quickly
  • only a washable surface got wet
  • no drywall, flooring, cabinets, or insulation are damp

Do not enter

  • water is near electricity
  • ceilings are sagging
  • the crawl space may be contaminated
  • water is deep enough to hide hazards

First 30 minutes

  1. Shut off the water source if it is safe.
  2. Avoid rooms with electrical hazards.
  3. Photograph every affected room before cleanup.
  4. Move dry items away from wet floors and walls.
  5. Save plumber, roof, or appliance repair notes.
  6. Call before wet materials sit overnight.

Call before

  • wet carpet sits overnight
  • drywall feels soft
  • water reaches cabinets
  • odor starts after cleanup
  • the source is still unclear

Page focus

Storm priorities

Storm water cleanup needs source tracking. Drying the room is only part of the work when roof, window, door, siding, grading, or crawl space entry is involved.

Water type

Clean, gray, or black water

The source changes the cleanup plan, what can dry in place, and what should be removed.

TypeCommon sourceWhat it means
Clean waterSupply lines, sink overflows, appliance linesFast drying may prevent demolition when materials are still sound.
Gray waterDishwashers, washing machines, some toilet or tub overflowsCleanup may require more removal and sanitation.
Black waterSewage, floodwater, stormwater with soil or debrisAvoid contact and ask about removal, sanitation, and disposal.

What to check

  • water after heavy rain
  • wet window trim
  • roof leak stains
  • water at exterior doors
  • mud or debris indoors

Next steps

  1. photograph entry points
  2. protect dry areas
  3. remove wet materials as needed
  4. monitor moisture after drying

Common sources

  • roof leaks
  • wind-driven rain
  • door threshold leaks
  • window flashing problems
  • yard drainage toward the home

What crews check

  • entry point evidence
  • water category concerns
  • wet insulation
  • baseboard and drywall moisture
  • crawl space water after storms

Materials affected

  • window trim
  • door casing
  • lower drywall
  • insulation
  • flooring near exterior walls

Documentation

  • storm date and time
  • entry point photos
  • weather-related notes
  • rooms affected
  • drying readings

Huntsville causes

  • heavy rain and wind-driven rain around windows or doors
  • roof leaks after storms
  • crawl space water from grading or short downspouts
  • frozen or split pipes during North Alabama cold snaps
  • water heater, washer, dishwasher, or refrigerator line failures

Mitigation vs rebuild

Mitigation covers extraction, demolition, drying, disposal, and moisture monitoring. Rebuild covers drywall, paint, trim, flooring, cabinets, and finish work.

Keep those scopes separate so estimates are easier to compare.

Cost factors

What affects cleanup cost

Water damage cleanup is usually priced around extraction, demolition, drying equipment, monitoring, and disposal. Rebuild may be separate.

ScopePlanning rangeNotes
Water extractionOften lower than rebuildDepends on standing water, carpet, pad, and access.
Drying equipmentPriced by equipment and daysAsk for air mover, dehumidifier, and monitoring line items.
Selective demolitionVaries by materialDrywall, trim, pad, insulation, or cabinets may need removal.
RebuildUsually separateFlooring, drywall, paint, cabinets, and trim are often quoted after mitigation.

Guides

Helpful next reads

When to call

Call when water appears after rain, trim is wet around windows, ceiling stains grow, water enters at doors, or crawl space water follows storms.

Water damage scope can change by the hour. Separate the source, drying, cleanup, and rebuild work before approving a proposal.

What to avoid

  • caulking before finding the source
  • drying only the visible puddle
  • ignoring wet insulation
  • missing exterior drainage issues

FAQ

Water damage questions

How fast should water damage be dried?

Start drying as soon as the water source is controlled. Wet drywall, carpet pad, cabinets, and subfloor can worsen when they sit overnight.

Can wet drywall dry in place?

Sometimes, but it depends on water category, how long it was wet, insulation, and moisture readings inside the wall. Soft, contaminated, or insulated drywall often needs removal.

Should wet carpet pad be removed?

Often yes. Carpet may sometimes be dried, but saturated pad can hold water against the subfloor and slow drying.

Is water damage cleanup covered by insurance?

Coverage depends on the policy and source. Sudden pipe or appliance leaks are handled differently than seepage, maintenance issues, sewage, or floodwater.

What should I document before cleanup?

Photograph the source, wet rooms, flooring, walls, cabinets, contents, equipment, removed materials, and final moisture readings.

Before you call

This site routes calls to independent providers or referral partners when available. We do not perform restoration, mitigation, mold remediation, inspections, estimates, warranties, or rebuild work.

For sewage, floodwater, sagging ceilings, electrical hazards, or unsafe crawl spaces, avoid entry and wait for qualified help.

Water damage topics

Nearby water damage help

Call

Water damage line

For water damage help in Huntsville, call the dedicated line.

Call now (832) 305-9873
Call (832) 305-9873