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Homeowner Resources · 2026-02-10

Water damage: why the first 24 hours decide everything

What happens to a Springfield home in the first hours after a water loss, what to do immediately, what insurance expects of you, and how professional drying actually works.

The clock you can't see

Water doesn't sit where you can see it — it wicks up drywall, soaks into subfloor and sill plates, and migrates under flooring into rooms that look dry. The timeline is unforgiving: within minutes, water spreads and stains; within hours, drywall swells and furniture finishes bleed; within 24–48 hours, mold growth begins on wet organic materials; within a week, structural drying becomes structural demolition. Every hour of delay converts cleanup into reconstruction.

What to do right now

1) Stop the source — fixture shutoff valve or the main where the line enters the house (find yours today, before you need it). 2) Kill power to affected areas at the breaker if water is near outlets. 3) Move belongings up and out; foil under furniture legs prevents stain transfer to wet carpet. 4) Call a restoration company — extraction equipment removes hundreds of times more water than towels and shop vacs. 5) Photograph everything before cleanup for the claim.

What your insurance policy expects

Policies cover sudden and accidental water losses — and they require you to mitigate promptly. Delaying professional drying can give a carrier grounds to deny the resulting mold or rot as 'neglect.' Calling a restoration company immediately isn't just smart; it's effectively a policy condition. (Note: groundwater flooding requires separate flood insurance, and gradual long-term leaks are typically excluded — the cause determines coverage, which is why documentation matters.)

What professional drying actually involves

Real structural drying is measured, not guessed: moisture meters and thermal imaging map how far water traveled; extraction removes the bulk; air movers and commercial dehumidifiers are calculated to the room's cubic footage and material saturation; and daily documented readings prove the structure reached its dry standard before repairs begin. That documentation is also what your adjuster needs to pay the claim cleanly.

The mold question

If drying starts within the first day, mold usually never gets a foothold. If water sat for days — a leak while you were on vacation, a slow supply line drip — containment and remediation come first. A company that does both (like ours) keeps the project moving instead of handing you off mid-crisis.

Questions about your specific situation? Ohm Restoration offers free, documented assessments throughout the Springfield area — call (888) 319-7058.

Related Questions

Quick answers

Is a wet carpet salvageable?
Often, yes — clean-water losses extracted quickly can save carpet, though pad is usually replaced. Contaminated (sewage/flood) carpet is removed.
Should I run fans and open windows?
Air movement helps for small clean-water spills, but Missouri humidity can add moisture through open windows. For anything beyond a small spill, professional dehumidification is what actually dries a structure.
Does insurance cover the drying equipment?
Yes — mitigation (extraction, drying, equipment, monitoring) is a standard covered cost on a covered loss, billed directly to the claim.

Damage to your home or business? We're ready now.

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