What is the IICRC and why does it exist?
The IICRC is a nonprofit standards body that writes the technical rulebook for water damage restoration, mold remediation, and cleaning. It was founded in 1972 and now sets standards used across the United States, Canada, the UK, and Australia. The standard that matters most for your flooded Devon home is called the S500, and it covers everything from how to categorize water to how many air movers belong in a given square footage of wet drywall. The reason it exists is simple. Without a shared standard, every contractor would invent their own drying process, and insurance carriers would have no way to verify whether a job was done correctly. The S500 gives everyone, you, the restoration crew, and the adjuster, the same reference document. It also gets revised every few years through a public review process, which means the standard reflects current building science rather than what worked in the 1980s. The most recent revisions have added more guidance on engineered flooring, spray foam insulation, and structural drying in tightly sealed modern homes, all materials that behave very differently than the lath and plaster the original standards were written around.
What does it mean when a company says they are IICRC Certified?
It means at least one technician on the team has passed a written exam and completed hands on training in a specific discipline. The most common certifications you will see on a water damage job are WRT (Water Damage Restoration Technician), ASD (Applied Structural Drying), and AMRT (Applied Microbial Remediation Technician). A truly certified firm also holds a separate firm level certification, which requires ongoing education, liability insurance, and a written complaint resolution policy. When Devon Water Restoration arrives at your Devon property, the lead tech on site has been trained to assess Category 1, 2, or 3 water, document moisture readings, and design a drying plan that hits the S500 benchmarks. You can read more about how the three categories of water differ before we get there.
Does IICRC certification cost me more?
Not really. Certified pricing in Devon sits in the same range as non certified pricing, roughly $3.75 to $7 per square foot for standard mitigation, because the work is billed off the same Xactimate line items insurance carriers use nationwide. What changes is the quality of the result. You pay for a crew that knows how to set negative air on a Category 3 sewage loss, how to float carpet correctly, and when to remove drywall versus dry in place. The cost of getting it wrong, mold growth, structural rot, repeat visits, is far higher than any markup for trained labor. In our experience, the average homeowner who hires an uncertified crew ends up paying twice, once for the original botched job and again for a certified firm to come tear out the materials that were never properly dried the first time.
How do I verify a contractor is actually IICRC Certified?
Go to iicrc.org and use their public registry to search by company name or technician name. A real certification is verifiable in under sixty seconds. Be skeptical of vague claims like "trained in industry standards" or logos pasted on a website without a certificate number. Ask the technician on site for their personal certification card, which lists their disciplines and expiration date. If they cannot show it, that tells you everything. You can also ask how they handle Category 3 losses, and a trained tech should immediately mention containment, PPE, and antimicrobial application. For background on what those category 3 jobs involve, see our overview of black water damage cleanup procedures.
What questions should I ask before signing anything?
Ask which S500 class and category they have assigned to your loss, and why. Ask to see the moisture readings they took on arrival, not just a verbal estimate. Ask how often they will return to monitor drying progress, and what the target moisture content is for your specific materials. A trained tech will answer all three without hesitation. A salesperson with a pressure washer in the truck will deflect or change the subject.
Why should I care about documentation?
Because your insurance claim depends on it. Adjusters in Devon have seen every shortcut in the book. When Devon Water Restoration submits a file, it includes daily moisture maps, photographs of affected materials, equipment logs, and a written scope tied directly to S500 language. That paperwork is what gets your claim approved at the value it actually costs. Homeowners who hire uncertified crews often find out the hard way that their insurer will not pay for work that cannot be justified against the standard. If you want a deeper look at how claims are handled, our guide on what homeowners insurance covers for water damage walks through it step by step.
How does the IICRC standard actually change what happens in my house?
It changes almost everything. First, the technician categorizes the water source. Clean water from a supply line is Category 1. Water from a dishwasher or washing machine is Category 2. Sewage or floodwater is Category 3. Each category triggers a different protocol for what materials can be dried versus removed. Second, the tech classifies the affected area by how much porous material is wet. A Class 1 job might involve one wet wall in a tile bathroom. A Class 4 job means deeply saturated hardwood, plaster, or concrete. Third, the drying plan is calculated, not guessed. The S500 specifies how many dehumidifiers and air movers belong in a space based on cubic footage and the type of materials. A non certified outfit will drop two fans in a flooded basement and call it good. A certified crew will run the math, place equipment correctly, and document daily moisture readings until materials hit dry standard.
The standard also addresses what happens when water sits. After 48 to 72 hours, Category 1 water can degrade into Category 2 due to microbial growth, and Category 2 can degrade into Category 3. A certified tech understands that timeline and adjusts the scope accordingly. That single piece of training can be the difference between a $4,000 dry out and a $25,000 rebuild, because the moment the water is reclassified, more materials have to come out and antimicrobial protocols change.
What if my contractor is not following the standard?
You have options. Document what you see, take photos of equipment placement and any visible shortcuts, and request the moisture log. If the company refuses, that is a red flag worth acting on. The IICRC has a formal complaint process for firm level certified companies, and your state attorney general handles consumer complaints for everyone else. The cleanest path, though, is hiring right the first time. Look for a company that has been operating locally for at least five years, holds verifiable certifications, carries general liability and pollution insurance, and gives you a written scope before work begins. Those four filters will eliminate ninety percent of the bad actors in any Devon market.