The category of your water loss determines the protocols, the safety requirements, and often the insurance outcome. Here's what each one means.
IICRC Standards
Water damage isn't all the same. The IICRC S500 standard — the industry standard for water damage restoration — classifies losses by the contamination level of the water source. Category determines what protective gear technicians need, how affected materials are treated, what can be dried in place versus what must be removed, and what your insurance claim will look like.
Category 1
Category 1 water comes from a sanitary source and poses no substantial risk from ingestion or skin contact at the time of loss. It's the most straightforward category to work with — but it still requires fast response. Category 1 water left standing will degrade to Category 2 within 24–48 hours as it contacts building materials and the environment.
Broken supply lines, toilet tank overflow (not bowl), appliance water supply failures (refrigerator, dishwasher, washing machine), and water heater failures.
Affected porous materials like drywall and insulation can sometimes be dried in place if caught quickly. Flooring may be salvageable. Faster extraction and drying often means lower restoration costs.
Category 1 water becomes Category 2 within 24–48 hours of exposure to building materials. Category 2 becomes Category 3 if left standing longer. Fast response keeps the category — and the cost — lower.
Category 1 losses from sudden and accidental sources (burst pipe, appliance failure) are typically covered under standard homeowners insurance. Documentation of the source and timeline matters.
Category 2
Category 2 water contains significant contamination and has the potential to cause sickness or discomfort if ingested. It may carry microorganisms or nutrients for microorganism growth. Grey water requires more protective protocol than Category 1 and limits what can be dried in place versus removed.
Washing machine discharge, dishwasher overflow, aquarium leaks, toilet bowl overflow without feces, sink or bathtub overflow, and Category 1 water that has sat for 24–48 hours.
Porous materials that have absorbed grey water typically need to be removed rather than dried in place. Affected areas require antimicrobial treatment. PPE requirements for technicians increase.
Grey water carries organic material that supports mold growth. If the structure isn't fully dried and treated within the proper window, mold colonization is likely — adding cost and scope to the restoration.
Most Category 2 losses are coverable under standard homeowners insurance if the source was sudden and accidental. Some policies have exclusions for gradual leaks — documentation of the loss event timeline is critical.
Category 3
Category 3 is the most serious classification. Black water is grossly contaminated and contains pathogens, toxic agents, or other harmful agents. It poses a health risk and requires full protective protocol, removal of affected porous materials, and antimicrobial treatment of the structure. This is not a job for a shop vac and a fan.
Sewage backups, toilet bowl overflow with feces, rising floodwater from external sources (storm drain, river), and Category 1 or 2 water that has sat long enough to become highly contaminated.
All porous materials contacted by Category 3 water — drywall, insulation, carpet, pad — must be removed. The structure must be treated with EPA-registered antimicrobials. Technicians work in PPE. The scope and cost are higher than Cat 1 or 2.
Do not attempt to clean up Category 3 water yourself. Sewage contains bacteria, viruses, and parasites that can cause serious illness. Leave the affected area and call a professional immediately.
Sewage backups are not always covered under standard homeowners policies — coverage often requires a separate sewer backup endorsement. We document the loss fully so you and your adjuster can determine coverage accurately.
Why This Matters to You
A Category 1 loss caught fast costs less and requires less demo. The same loss left sitting for three days becomes Category 2 or 3 — more materials must come out, antimicrobials are required, and the scope grows. This is why fast response isn't just about drying — it's about keeping the category contained and limiting total damage.
Free inspection — we assess the source, classify the loss, and give you a clear picture before anything starts.
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