Restoration Services Providers
The providers compiled on this provider network cover verified fire damage restoration service providers operating across the United States, organized by specialty, geography, and certification status. Each entry maps to one or more defined restoration disciplines — from structural repair to smoke damage assessment and restoration — giving property owners, adjusters, and facility managers a structured reference point. The scope is national, with coverage across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Understanding how entries are structured helps users extract the most accurate information for a given loss scenario.
What each provider covers
Every provider in this network targets a specific restoration function rather than general contracting. The distinction matters because fire damage recovery involves at minimum five discrete disciplines: emergency stabilization, structural remediation, contents restoration, odor and air quality treatment, and water damage from firefighting restoration. A single provider may hold competency in all five or specialize in one.
Each provider identifies:
- Primary discipline — the service category the provider is classified under (e.g., soot removal, HVAC cleaning after fire damage, structural fire damage repair)
- Certification tier — whether the provider holds IICRC Fire and Smoke Restoration Technician (FSRT) credentials, Applied Structural Drying (ASD) certification, or other recognized designations per IICRC fire restoration standards
- Regulatory alignment — whether the provider documents compliance with EPA, OSHA, or applicable state environmental agency requirements, particularly where asbestos, lead, or biohazard materials are implicated
- Service radius — defined as a stated geographic boundary, not an approximation
- Loss type coverage — residential, commercial, wildfire, electrical, kitchen, or partial loss, corresponding to the loss-type taxonomy used throughout this resource
Providers verified under hazardous material categories must carry applicable EPA Section 608 certifications or state-equivalent credentials where asbestos or lead concerns are present. The asbestos and lead concerns in fire restoration reference page outlines the regulatory baseline that informs those classifications.
Geographic distribution
Providers are distributed across 9 U.S. Census Bureau-defined divisions: New England, Middle Atlantic, East North Central, West North Central, South Atlantic, East South Central, West South Central, Mountain, and Pacific. This structure prevents the metro-heavy skew common in unstructured networks, where providers in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago account for a disproportionate share of results.
Within each division, providers are further segmented by:
- Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) — for urban and suburban providers
- Non-MSA county clusters — for rural and wildland-urban interface service areas, which are particularly relevant to wildfire damage restoration providers operating in Western and Mountain division counties
The Pacific division carries the highest concentration of wildfire-specialized providers, reflecting the frequency of wildland-urban interface losses in California, Oregon, and Washington. The South Atlantic and East South Central divisions carry the highest concentration of residential fire damage restoration generalists, consistent with regional housing density and claim volume patterns documented by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).
How to read an entry
Each provider network entry follows a fixed six-field format. Understanding what each field represents prevents misreading a provider's scope.
Field 1 — Provider Name and Legal Entity Type: The registered business name, not a trade name, followed by LLC, Inc., or equivalent.
Field 2 — Primary Discipline Code: Drawn from the loss-type and service taxonomy defined in the restoration services provider network purpose and scope reference. A code of "STRUCT-COMM" indicates structural repair for commercial losses; "ODOR-RES" indicates odor elimination for residential losses.
Field 3 — Certification Status: Lists active IICRC, RIA (Restoration Industry Association), or NADCA credentials. An empty field indicates no verified credential on file — not necessarily uncertified, but unverified at time of provider.
Field 4 — Service Geography: Expressed as a named MSA, a county list, or a radius in miles from a stated address. Providers claiming statewide or multi-state coverage without a defined dispatch location are flagged with a "coverage unverified" notation.
Field 5 — Loss Type Flags: A set of binary indicators for residential, commercial, industrial, historic, and specialty loss types. Historic property fire damage restoration requires a separate flag because those projects intersect State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) review requirements and the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties.
Field 6 — Last Verified Date: The calendar quarter and year in which the provider data was last confirmed against the provider's public record. Entries not verified within 24 months carry a staleness flag.
What providers include and exclude
Included:
Excluded:
- Providers operating exclusively as insurance adjusters or public adjusters — those functions are addressed separately within fire damage restoration insurance claims
The exclusion of lead-generation aggregators is deliberate. Aggregator entries conflate marketing reach with service capacity, a distinction that matters when evaluating providers for time-sensitive losses. The choosing a fire damage restoration contractor reference covers the qualification criteria that underpin these exclusion boundaries in greater detail.
Providers do not constitute endorsements, licensing verifications, or insurance confirmations. Certification status is recorded as represented by the provider and cross-referenced against publicly accessible IICRC and RIA registry data where available.