Restoration Services Listings
The listings on this page index restoration contractors and service providers operating across the United States who specialize in storm-related property damage. Entries span residential and commercial contexts, covering damage categories from wind and hail to flood, ice, and tornado events. Understanding how entries are structured, what data points they contain, and where gaps exist helps property owners and claims professionals use this resource accurately. For broader context on the restoration industry's scope and structure, see the restoration services directory purpose and scope page.
How to read an entry
Each listing follows a standardized card format designed to surface the information most relevant to post-storm decision-making. Fields are drawn from public business registrations, contractor licensing databases, and industry association records — not self-reported marketing content.
A standard entry contains the following elements in order:
- Business name and primary operating state — The legal business name as registered with the applicable state licensing board, paired with the state(s) of primary operation.
- License classification — The contractor license type held, categorized by state-issued class (e.g., General Contractor, Roofing Contractor, Specialty Restoration). License class definitions vary by jurisdiction; 32 states maintain separate licensing categories for water damage and mold remediation work.
- IICRC credential status — Whether the firm holds active certification under IICRC S500 (water damage), IICRC S520 (mold remediation), or IICRC S700 (wind-driven rain), as published in the IICRC's public certification registry.
- Damage category coverage — A tagged list drawn from the damage taxonomy used across types of storm damage: wind, hail, flood/water intrusion, lightning strike, tornado, hurricane, ice/winter storm.
- Service scope — Indicates whether the provider handles emergency stabilization only (board-up, tarping, water extraction), full restoration, or both. Providers specializing in emergency stabilization are distinct from those offering complete temporary repairs versus permanent restoration workflows.
- Geographic service radius — Expressed in miles from the firm's registered address, or listed as "statewide" / "regional" where the firm's licensing footprint covers multiple jurisdictions.
- Verified last updated — The date the entry's license status was last cross-checked against source databases. Entries not updated within 18 months carry a stale-data flag.
Entries do not include customer reviews, complaint histories, or pricing data. Those elements introduce verification problems beyond what public records can reliably support.
What listings include and exclude
Included:
- Licensed contractors with at least one active state-issued license in a restoration-relevant trade category
- Firms with documented IICRC certification in one or more storm-damage standards
- Providers operating in declared federal disaster zones, cross-referenced with FEMA assistance and storm restoration designations for accuracy
- Both residential-focused and commercial-focused firms, tagged accordingly per storm damage restoration residential and storm damage restoration commercial classification criteria
Excluded:
- Unlicensed or license-lapsed contractors, regardless of market presence
- Firms whose primary business is general construction with no documented storm restoration specialization
- Public adjusters, insurance agents, and legal professionals — those roles are distinct from restoration contractors; see working with public adjusters on storm claims for that category
- Equipment rental companies and suppliers that do not perform restoration work directly
- Firms flagged in state attorney general databases or the Federal Trade Commission's public enforcement records for contractor fraud patterns — see storm restoration fraud and contractor scams for context on fraud indicators
The distinction between a full-service restoration contractor and a mitigation-only firm is consequential for insurance claims. The storm damage insurance claims restoration page covers how scope-of-work boundaries affect claim documentation and adjuster approvals.
Verification status
Listings are verified against three source categories:
- State licensing board records — Checked via each state's publicly accessible contractor license lookup portal. License status, expiration date, and trade classification are recorded at the time of verification.
- IICRC certification registry — The IICRC maintains a searchable public database of certified firms and technicians. Certification status reflected in listings matches registry data at the last verification date shown on each entry.
- Federal contractor databases — For firms operating on federally funded disaster recovery projects, System for Award Management (SAM.gov) registration status is noted where applicable.
Verification is not a guarantee of current license standing. License lapses, disciplinary actions, and certification expirations can occur between update cycles. The storm restoration contractor qualifications and storm restoration contractor licensing pages explain what to check independently before engaging any provider.
Coverage gaps
The directory does not achieve uniform national coverage. Identifiable gaps fall into four patterns:
- Rural and low-density markets — Counties with fewer than 10,000 residents in the Plains and Mountain West regions are underrepresented because fewer licensed restoration contractors operate there, not because of a data collection limitation.
- Specialty damage categories — Lightning strike damage restoration and ice storm damage restoration have thinner provider pools nationally, with fewer than 400 IICRC-certified firms explicitly listing those as primary specializations.
- Post-disaster surge entrants — Following a declared federal disaster, out-of-state contractors often enter a market under reciprocity provisions or temporary licensing rules. These entrants move faster than licensing database updates, creating a lag of 30 to 90 days before new entrants appear in verifiable records.
- Mold and moisture remediation overlap — Providers who handle storm damage moisture and mold risk as a secondary service rather than a primary one may not appear under mold remediation searches even when they perform that work. EPA guidance under 40 CFR Part 763 governs asbestos-containing materials disturbed during storm restoration, adding a regulatory layer that not all listed firms are qualified to navigate.
The storm damage restoration by region (US) page maps coverage density by FEMA region and identifies the states where listing completeness is lowest relative to documented storm frequency.