Why the First 60 Minutes Decide Everything
Most water-loss damage happens AFTER the visible event ends. The pipe bursts and you see the water. You shut it off. You think the worst is behind you. The actual restoration cost is decided by what happens in the next 60 minutes โ whether moisture migrates into wall cavities, subfloor, and ceiling spaces before drying equipment can stop it.
Drywall wicks moisture upward in the first hour. Subfloors absorb downward. By hour 24, materials that were not even visibly wet have measurable moisture content above the dry standard. By day three, microbial growth starts on materials that the homeowner thinks are fine. The cost difference between a same-hour response and a next-day response on the same loss is often 3 to 5x โ not because the work is more expensive, but because more material has to come out and go back in.
Our {{city}} dispatch is real 24/7 โ a human answers the call, gets the address and loss type, and rolls a truck while we are still on the phone with you. Pre-staged equipment for known surge periods (winter freeze events, named storms) means individual response times do not slip even when call volume spikes across {{county}} County.