Standing water out fast — then a real dryout, confirmed with moisture checks instead of guesses.
Standing water gets pulled out first — fast. But the water you cannot see is what ruins houses: moisture soaked into subfloor, wicked up drywall, trapped in insulation. That is why extraction is only step one. State-of-the-art drying equipment then works the structure, and moisture checks confirm proper drying before anything gets closed back up.
Even when the surface looks dry, moisture can remain behind walls, under flooring, and in insulation — and mold can begin forming in as little as 24 to 48 hours after water exposure. A dryout that stops at “looks dry” is how a flooded kitchen becomes a mold job in August.
Contaminated water from a drain or sewer line is its own protocol — see sewage backup cleanup. Musty smell after an old leak? Start with mold assessment & removal.

The call comes first — the line answers 24/7, and you get straight answers on what to do right now while the crew is on the way. Extraction pulls the standing water, damaged materials that cannot be saved come out, and the drying equipment goes in.
Then the part most people never see: monitoring. Moisture levels are checked and re-checked until the readings say the structure is properly dried — most drying takes 3 to 7 days. Only then do repairs begin, so the rebuild never seals moisture inside a wall.
Some companies only do dryouts. Here the dryout and rebuild are handled by one team: drying, removal of damaged materials, and reconstruction to return the property to its original condition. You never coordinate three contractors over one flood.
The problem: A supply line let go in an upstairs bathroom of a Broken Arrow home overnight. By morning, water had come through the kitchen ceiling and the hardwood in the hallway was cupping.
What was done: Standing water was extracted the same morning, the wet section of ceiling came down, and air movers and dehumidifiers ran while moisture readings tracked the framing and subfloor down to dry — then the ceiling and flooring were rebuilt.
The result: A dry, documented structure and one team from the first call to the last coat of paint — with the job file shared directly with the homeowner’s insurance company.
Spring storm season pushes water into crawl spaces and around slab edges; hard winter cold snaps burst pipes in attics and exterior walls. A crew that dries Green Country homes every week knows where water hides in a midtown pier-and-beam house versus a newer slab build — and starts pulling it out instead of finding out.
As fast as possible. Water keeps soaking into subfloor, drywall, and insulation the whole time it stands, and mold can begin forming in as little as 24 to 48 hours after water exposure. The 24/7 line means extraction starts with fast arrival times instead of after the weekend.
After the standing water is extracted, state-of-the-art drying equipment — air movers and dehumidifiers — works the floors, walls, and framing. Moisture checks confirm proper drying: readings are monitored until the structure is actually dry, not just dry-looking on the surface.
Most drying takes 3 to 7 days, depending on how much got wet and how long it sat. You get a detailed restoration plan and an honest timeline after the inspection, and moisture levels are monitored to confirm the structure is properly dried before repairs begin.
Sometimes — it depends on how long the water sat and what kind of water it was. The plan comes from moisture readings, not a worst-case pitch: if carpet can be dried instead of replaced, you hear that. Materials too far gone are removed, and repairs and reconstruction return the space to its original condition.
Call anyway — the job changes, but it is still fixable. Longer exposure usually means more material removal and a mold assessment, since mold can begin forming in as little as 24 to 48 hours. The crew handles both, so nothing falls between two contractors.
Yes. Water damage in basements, crawlspaces, attics, and every part of the structure — hidden areas trap moisture and cause mold or odors if they are not dried correctly, so the equipment and methods are designed to dry the entire structure.
Coverage depends on your policy and what caused the loss — your insurer decides that. What the crew does: work directly with your insurance company to make the process as smooth as possible, and document the job carefully from the first inspection to the final repair.
Yes — free estimates with no obligation. Describe what happened over the phone and you get straight answers on what to do right now, before any work starts.
Yes. Homes and apartments, commercial buildings, and new construction water losses. The drying plan scales to the building — the moisture checks and documentation work the same way.
Stop the source of water if it is safe to do so, and avoid using electrical outlets near wet areas. Do not run household fans into soaked drywall — describe the situation on the phone and you will get plain instructions for your exact case.
The emergency line answers 24/7. Describe what happened — straight answers, fast arrival times, and a free estimate. No obligation.
(918) 555-0101