Fire Damage Contractor Services

Fire damage contractor services cover the specialized trades and restoration disciplines engaged after a structure sustains damage from fire, smoke, soot, or the water and chemicals used in suppression. This page defines the scope of those services, explains how restoration work is sequenced, identifies the scenarios that most commonly require contractor involvement, and clarifies the decision points that separate one type of service from another. Understanding these distinctions helps property owners, insurers, and adjusters identify the correct contractors for each phase of recovery.

Definition and scope

Fire damage contractor services are a subset of emergency contractor services that address structural, mechanical, and finish-level damage resulting from fire events. The scope extends beyond burned material to include smoke penetration, soot deposition, corrosive byproduct contamination, water intrusion from suppression activity, and compromised building systems.

The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) publishes the S700 Standard for Professional Fire and Smoke Damage Restoration, which defines the technical baseline for assessment, cleaning, deodorization, and structural drying. Contractors operating in this space typically hold credentials referencing IICRC S700 or its companion standard S500 for water damage, because suppression water is almost always a co-occurring condition.

The service category spans:

How it works

Fire damage restoration follows a defined sequence because each phase creates the preconditions for the next. Skipping or rushing a phase produces callbacks, hidden mold growth, or failed inspections.

Phase sequence:

Permit requirements at step 6 vary by jurisdiction. The contractor holds responsibility for pulling permits on structural and systems work (contractor permit and inspection responsibilities).

Common scenarios

Kitchen fire with cabinet and structural damage — The most frequent residential fire scenario. Damage is typically confined to one room but smoke penetrates HVAC ductwork and can affect an entire floor. Duct cleaning and sealing is required alongside cabinet replacement and ceiling repair.

Attic or roof fire — Roof fires often involve a full replacement of decking, sheathing, and roofing material. When fire breaches the top plate, the ceiling assembly below and insulation must also be replaced. Coordination between roofing contractor services and structural trades is essential.

Electrical fire in wall cavities — These fires travel inside wall assemblies before visible flame appears. Demolition may need to expose wiring runs across multiple rooms. All replacement wiring must meet current National Electrical Code (NEC) requirements published by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), currently the 2023 edition of NFPA 70.

Commercial structure fire — Commercial projects introduce OSHA 29 CFR 1926 construction safety requirements, asbestos abatement evaluation under EPA National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP), and extended permit timelines. A licensed general contractor is required in most states to coordinate the multi-trade scope.

Decision boundaries

Restoration vs. full reconstruction — Minor smoke damage to finish surfaces (paint, carpet, cabinetry) without structural involvement is a restoration-only scope. Once structural members — studs, joists, rafters, or load-bearing assemblies — are charred beyond 50% of their cross-section, replacement is required under most building codes, triggering full reconstruction permitting.

Restoration contractor vs. general contractor — Credentialed restoration firms handle cleaning, drying, and emergency stabilization. When the scope includes new structural framing, mechanical system installation, or changes to the building envelope, a licensed general contractor must typically hold the primary contract and pull permits. State licensing law governs this boundary; requirements differ across jurisdictions (contractor licensing requirements by state).

Insurance-directed vs. owner-directed scope — Insurers fund restoration to pre-loss condition. Code upgrade work required by current AHJ standards — such as AFCI circuit breaker upgrades or updated egress window sizing — may fall outside the insurance scope and become the property owner's financial responsibility. This distinction should be resolved in writing before reconstruction begins (contractor contract and agreement basics).

Mold co-occurrence — Suppression water that sits for 48–72 hours before drying begins creates conditions for mold amplification. When mold is confirmed, mold remediation contractor services must be engaged as a separate licensed discipline before enclosure.

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·   · 

References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)