The Short Answer
Mitigation — the drying phase — takes 3 to 5 days in most residential jobs. Reconstruction (replacing drywall, flooring, paint) is a separate scope and timeline, handled after the dry-out is complete and the adjuster signs off.
The range matters. A Class 1 loss — one room, limited materials, caught early — can close in 3 days. A Class 3 loss — saturated walls and ceiling across multiple rooms — can run 5 to 7 days. The variables below determine where your job lands.
What Determines the Timeline
Material type. Drywall dries faster than plywood subfloor. Plywood subfloor dries faster than a concrete slab. Hardwood flooring and cabinetry hold moisture longer than any of them.
Water category. Category 1 (clean water — burst supply line) dries straightforward. Category 2 (gray water — washing machine, toilet overflow without solids) requires additional precautions. Category 3 (black water — sewage, rising external water) requires full containment and antimicrobial treatment before drying begins.
Time before mitigation started. Water that's been sitting for 24 hours has wicked further into walls and subfloor than water from a pipe that burst an hour ago. Every hour matters in the first day.
Bakersfield's climate. Hot and dry works in your favor — ambient conditions support faster evaporation. But wall cavity humidity and subfloor moisture don't respond to outdoor temperature. Equipment-driven drying is still required regardless of what's happening outside.
What Happens Each Day
Day 1. Extract all standing water. Place Dri-Eaz LGR dehumidifiers and air movers. Take baseline moisture readings at every affected surface — walls, floor, subfloor, ceiling if affected. Log all readings. Take photos before and after equipment placement.
Days 2–4. Return daily. Take moisture readings at every monitoring point. Adjust equipment placement as areas dry. Document each session with date, time, readings, and equipment status.
Final day. All monitored surfaces hit the dry standard for that material type — defined by IICRC S500 protocol, not by feel or assumption. Equipment comes out. Final dry certificate issued with full monitoring log attached.
What Can Extend the Timeline
- Late start — water sitting before the first call significantly widens the affected area
- Hardwood subfloor or concrete slab — both hold moisture longer than gypsum board
- Hidden moisture in wall cavities found after initial assessment — sometimes requires additional equipment placement or flood cuts to access
- Category 2 or 3 water — safety protocols add time before equipment can go in
- Large affected area — more monitoring points, more equipment, longer dry cycle
What Happens After Mitigation
Once the dry certificate is issued, the mitigation scope closes. At that point, your adjuster reviews the dry report and authorizes the reconstruction scope — drywall replacement, flooring, paint, cabinetry if affected.
Reconstruction is a separate trade. KWDR handles mitigation. We can refer you to contractors we've worked with in Bakersfield, or you can use your carrier's preferred vendor network. Either way, the dry certificate is what unlocks reconstruction authorization — you need it, and it needs to be complete.