Case Study: Water Damage — $18,400 in Missing Scope Recovered

Claim Type Burst Pipe Water Damage
Initial Offer $18,200
Final Settlement $36,600
Recovery Amount +$18,400
Timeline 5 weeks

Privacy Notice

This case study is based on a real insurance claim. Names, locations, and identifying details have been redacted to protect client confidentiality. All dollar amounts, timelines, and negotiation strategies are accurate.

The Problem

Sarah M. returned from a weekend trip to discover her basement flooded. A supply line to the washing machine had burst, releasing water for an estimated 36-48 hours.

The damage was extensive: standing water throughout the 800 sq ft finished basement, soaked drywall, damaged flooring, and water-logged furniture and belongings.

Sarah immediately contacted her insurance carrier and hired a water mitigation company to extract the water and dry the structure.

The adjuster inspected the property 3 days after the loss. Two weeks later, Sarah received a settlement offer: $18,200.

The estimate covered water extraction, drywall replacement, and flooring. But Sarah's contractor identified significant missing scope:

Sarah's contractor estimate: $36,600.

The gap: $18,400.

Before vs. After Estimate Comparison

Line Item Insurance Estimate Final Approved Amount Gap
Water Extraction & Drying $2,800 $2,800 $0
Drywall Removal & Replacement $4,200 $7,900 +$3,700
Insulation Replacement (R-13 batts) $0 $1,850 +$1,850
Subfloor Replacement (OSB) $0 $3,600 +$3,600
Flooring Replacement (LVP) $5,400 $6,200 +$800
Baseboard & Trim Replacement $1,200 $1,950 +$750
Electrical Inspection & Repair $0 $2,400 +$2,400
Mold Remediation (IICRC Protocol) $0 $3,200 +$3,200
Paint & Finish Work $2,100 $3,400 +$1,300
Debris Removal & Disposal $800 $1,200 +$400
General Contractor Overhead & Profit $1,700 $3,100 +$1,400
Total $18,200 $36,600
Total Gap Recovered $18,400

What Was Missing

1. Insulation Replacement

The adjuster's estimate included drywall removal but not insulation replacement. When drywall is removed after water damage, the insulation behind it is almost always wet and must be replaced to prevent mold growth and maintain R-value.

The adjuster claimed insulation "wasn't damaged" because it wasn't visible during inspection. This is a common tactic—adjusters assume insulation is salvageable unless explicitly proven otherwise.

2. Subfloor Replacement

The estimate included flooring replacement but not subfloor replacement. OSB subfloor absorbs water and delaminates when submerged. Building code requires subfloor replacement when structural integrity is compromised.

The adjuster claimed the subfloor "appeared dry" during inspection (3 days after mitigation). However, OSB retains moisture internally even after surface drying, leading to warping and mold growth.

3. Electrical Inspection and Repair

Electrical outlets and wiring were submerged for 36-48 hours. Building code requires electrical inspection and testing after submersion. Damaged outlets and wiring must be replaced.

The adjuster omitted electrical work entirely, claiming it was "not visibly damaged." This is a dangerous cost-cutting tactic—submerged electrical components pose fire and shock hazards even if they appear functional.

4. Mold Remediation

Sarah's contractor identified visible mold growth on wall studs and sill plates during demolition. Mold remediation requires IICRC-certified professionals and specialized protocols.

The adjuster's initial estimate included no mold remediation. When Sarah raised the issue, the adjuster claimed mold was "pre-existing" and not covered. This is a standard denial tactic—carriers attempt to classify mold as a maintenance issue rather than a consequence of the covered water loss.

The Documentation Strategy

Step 1: Policy Analysis

We reviewed Sarah's HO-3 policy. Key findings:

Step 2: Contractor Documentation

Sarah's contractor provided:

Step 3: Supplement Submission

We provided Sarah with a supplement template that included:

Timeline: Week-by-Week Breakdown

Week 1: Initial Review & Contractor Assessment

Sarah uploaded adjuster estimate and policy to Claim Command Pro. We completed policy analysis and confirmed missing scope items were covered. Contractor completed detailed assessment with moisture readings and photographic documentation.

Week 2: Evidence Collection

Contractor obtained electrical inspection report and mold assessment report. Sarah documented all missing scope items with timestamped photos showing wet insulation, delaminated subfloor, and mold growth on framing.

Week 3: Supplement Submission

We provided supplement template with line-item comparison, policy citations, and supporting exhibits. Sarah submitted via certified mail and email to adjuster and claims supervisor. Established 15-day response deadline.

Week 4: Carrier Response & Partial Approval

Carrier issued revised estimate: $28,400. Approved insulation, subfloor, and electrical repairs. Continued to deny mold remediation, claiming it was "pre-existing." Gap reduced to $8,200.

Week 5: Mold Causation Demand & Final Settlement

We provided supplemental demand template for mold remediation. Sarah cited policy language covering "resulting damage" and provided mold assessor report confirming growth occurred post-loss. Carrier approved full supplement: $36,600 total. Settlement check issued within 5 business days.

Negotiation Challenges

Challenge #1: "Not Visibly Damaged" Tactic

The adjuster omitted insulation, subfloor, and electrical repairs because they "weren't visibly damaged" during the initial inspection.

Resolution: Sarah's contractor documented the hidden damage with photos taken during demolition. Moisture readings proved the subfloor retained water despite surface drying. The electrical inspection report confirmed submersion damage. The carrier approved these items after receiving the evidence.

Challenge #2: Mold Exclusion Attempt

The carrier initially denied mold remediation, claiming mold was "pre-existing" and excluded under the policy's mold exclusion.

Resolution: We cited the policy's "resulting damage" provision: mold growth caused by a covered peril (burst pipe) is covered. The mold assessor's report confirmed the growth was recent (post-loss) based on spore type and growth pattern. The carrier reversed the denial.

Challenge #3: Incomplete Drywall Measurement

The adjuster measured only the visibly damaged drywall (bottom 2 feet). However, water wicked up the walls via capillary action, requiring drywall replacement to 4 feet per industry standards.

Resolution: The contractor provided moisture readings showing elevated levels at 4 feet. We cited IICRC S500 standards (industry standard for water damage restoration) requiring removal of all affected materials. The carrier approved the additional drywall scope.

Final Outcome

Settlement Summary

Initial Offer: $18,200

Final Settlement: $36,600

Recovery Amount: +$18,400

Timeline: 5 weeks from supplement submission to final payment

Cost: $149 (Claim Command Pro) + $0 (no attorney or public adjuster fees)

Sarah recovered $18,400 in missing scope that would have been left on the table without structured supplement methodology.

The key factors in the successful outcome:

Lessons Learned

1. Hidden Damage Is Often Omitted

Adjusters document only visible damage during initial inspections. Insulation, subfloor, and structural components are often omitted because they aren't visible until demolition begins. Policyholders must document hidden damage and submit supplements.

2. Moisture Readings Are Critical

Visual inspection is insufficient for water damage claims. Moisture meters provide objective evidence of water intrusion in subfloors, wall cavities, and structural components. Without moisture readings, carriers will deny hidden damage as "not proven."

3. Expert Reports Validate Scope

Licensed professionals (electricians, mold assessors) provide credible third-party validation of required repairs. Their reports carry more weight than homeowner or contractor assertions.

4. "Resulting Damage" Provision Covers Mold

Most policies exclude mold as a standalone peril but cover mold that results from a covered peril. If mold growth is caused by a burst pipe (covered), the mold remediation is covered under the "resulting damage" provision.

5. Industry Standards Establish Scope Requirements

IICRC S500 and other industry standards provide objective criteria for water damage restoration. Citing these standards in supplement demands establishes the required scope of work and counters adjuster attempts to minimize repairs.

Get Help with Your Water Damage Claim

If your insurance estimate is missing scope or underpriced, Claim Command Pro can help you recover what you're owed.

We provide policy analysis, supplement templates, evidence checklists, and escalation guidance.

Start Your Claim Review — $149

Average recovery: $12,000-$47,000 per claim

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