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Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration in Northern Virginia

Soot removal, smoke-odor neutralization, contents pack-out, and reconstruction after a house or structure fire — with the water-damage cleanup the fire department leaves behind handled too.

Restoration Doctor Water Removal8609 Westwood Center Dr, Ste 110-1062, Vienna, VA 221821-888-29-FLOOD
FIRE DAMAGE / BY THE NUMBERS
47 minutes
Median arrival
26,000+
Projects completed
83%
File via insurance
4.5 days
Avg. dry-out
Restoration Doctor — verified operational metrics behind Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration in Northern Virginia
MetricValueNotes
Median on-site arrival time47 minutesMeasured median arrival across dispatched emergency projects — the middle value, not an average. Distinct from the 60-minute response SLA below.
Restoration projects completed to date26,000+Aggregate count of completed restoration projects to date across the VA / MD / D.C. tri-state service area.
Customers who file through insurance83%Share of CUSTOMERS who use insurance. Restoration Doctor works for the homeowner — you pay us directly, and we build a carrier-ready claim file documented to Xactimate and IICRC S500 so your insurer reimburses you fairly.
Average structural dry-out time4.5 daysAverage time to bring a structure to documented dry standards; monitored daily with moisture readings. Individual projects vary by saturation class.
Emergency response SLA (NoVA core)60 minutesThe PROMISED response commitment across the NoVA core — a broader guarantee than the measured 47-minute median arrival.
Google rating (live)4.94.9★ is the verified average. The review count changes nightly and is served live at /api/reviews-summary — never hardcoded.
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Why fire damage restoration is really two emergencies at once

Fire damage restoration in Northern Virginia almost always means dealing with two kinds of destruction at the same time. There is the fire itself — charred framing, burned finishes, structural members that have lost integrity — and then there is everything the fire leaves in its wake: acidic soot on every surface, smoke odor driven deep into porous materials, and hundreds or thousands of gallons of water and chemical residue from the fire department's suppression effort. A restoration plan that treats only the burned rooms and ignores the smoke and water misses most of the damage.

The chemistry is unforgiving and it does not wait. Soot is acidic, and within hours it begins etching glass, discoloring metal, corroding electronics, and staining grout and stone. Left in place for days, cosmetic soot that could have been cleaned becomes permanent damage that has to be replaced. That is why the clock on a fire loss starts the moment the flames are out — the sooner residues are stabilized and removed, the more of your home and belongings survive.

Stabilize, clean, deodorize — in that order

Our first move on a fire scene is stabilization. We board up openings, tarp compromised roofs, and address the standing water and saturated materials from suppression so a water emergency doesn't grow inside a fire emergency. Wet, sooty materials are a mold risk within the same 48-to-72-hour window as any other water loss, so drying begins immediately alongside soot control.

Cleaning is methodical because smoke behaves differently on different surfaces. Dry, powdery soot from a fast-burning fire is removed with dry-cleaning sponges and HEPA vacuums; greasy, protein-based residues from a kitchen fire demand solvent cleaning and degreasers. We match the method to the residue on ceilings, walls, cabinetry, and hard contents, and we HEPA-filter the air throughout so fine particulate isn't just pushed around the house.

Odor is the hardest part and the one homeowners judge most. Smoke molecules embed in drywall, insulation, framing, soft goods, and HVAC systems, and masking them with fragrance only hides the problem until humidity brings it back. We neutralize odor at the source with thermal fogging, hydroxyl and ozone treatment, sealing of odor-bearing surfaces where appropriate, and a full cleaning of the duct system so the HVAC isn't re-circulating smell through the rebuilt home.

Contents pack-out and inventory

Not everything can — or should — be cleaned in a home that is still an active work site. When a loss is significant, we pack out affected belongings under a documented inventory: furniture, clothing, electronics, documents, and keepsakes are cataloged, photographed, moved to controlled cleaning and storage, and restored off-site. Working outside the debris and moisture of the structure gives fragile and high-value items their best chance.

That inventory is also a claim asset. A photographed, itemized contents log gives your adjuster a clear record of what was affected and what was salvageable, which supports both the restoration and the personal-property side of your policy. When the home is ready, cleaned and restored contents come back, and we handle the reconstruction that returns the house to pre-loss condition.

Rebuilding under one roof

After the soot, smoke, and water are handled, a fire loss still needs to be rebuilt — often substantially. Because Restoration Doctor carries in-house carpentry, licensed plumbing and electrical, and full reconstruction alongside mitigation, we take a fire-damaged Northern Virginia home from emergency board-up all the way to a finished, move-in walk-through without handing you off to a separate general contractor.

Every phase is documented in CompanyCam and estimated in Xactimate with line-item notes, so the fire, smoke, water, and contents portions of your claim all reconcile into one coherent, carrier-ready file. One operation, one accountable point of contact, one clean claim.

The first 24 hours: what to do, and what to leave alone

What happens in the first day after a fire has an outsized effect on how much is recoverable, and most of it comes down to restraint. Do not re-enter the structure until the fire department and, where required, an inspector have cleared it — heat-weakened framing, compromised stairs, and lingering hot spots are real hazards even after the visible flames are out. Once you are cleared to retrieve essentials, resist the urge to start wiping down sooty surfaces or running the HVAC. Both instincts, though understandable, tend to make the damage worse: wiping grinds acidic soot into finishes, and running the air handler pulls smoke and particulate through the whole duct system and re-deposits it in rooms the fire never reached.

There are a few genuinely useful early steps. Photograph everything before anything is moved or cleaned, both for your own records and for the claim. Notify your insurer promptly to open the claim and ask what documentation they need. If the weather is a factor and it is safe, note where the structure is open to the elements so it can be prioritized for board-up and tarping. And keep receipts for any emergency lodging or essentials — most policies include additional-living-expense coverage when a fire makes a home uninhabitable.

The single most valuable early move is simply getting a qualified restoration crew on site quickly. The sooner residues are stabilized, the structure is secured, and suppression water is dried, the more of your home and belongings survive the days that follow. A fire is overwhelming, and you should not have to figure out the sequence yourself — that is what an experienced restoration operation is for, and why our dispatch runs around the clock.

It also helps to understand how the insurance side unfolds so it feels less chaotic. After you open the claim, your carrier assigns an adjuster who will want to see the damage and an itemized scope before authorizing the full repair, and larger fire losses sometimes involve a cause-and-origin investigation that must conclude before certain work proceeds. Meanwhile, emergency mitigation — board-up, tarping, water removal, and stabilization — is generally authorized right away because it prevents the loss from growing, and reputable restoration companies document that emergency work separately for exactly that reason. Knowing this rhythm ahead of time means you are not left wondering why the rebuild has not started on day two: the sequence of stabilize, document, approve, and rebuild is normal, and a good restoration partner keeps you informed at each step rather than leaving you to chase answers.

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