Property · Damage
Equipment Days on a Restoration Bill
Equipment days should be tied to readings and pickup criteria.
Understand one of the most confusing restoration bill drivers before approving or comparing a bill.
Air movers, dehumidifiers, air scrubbers, monitoring visits, and pickup timing can drive a restoration invoice. The question is what proof supports the days.
Plain English
What should I do next?
Use the page to slow down the decision, save proof, check cost, and ask better questions.
Start here: Start with the first button or checklist, then use the decision packet if the answer affects money or paperwork.
Safety and claim boundary
Do not unplug or remove restoration equipment without asking the provider; drying plans and safety conditions may depend on it.
Kefiw does not adjust claims, interpret your specific policy, receive private claim documents, or decide coverage. Do not send private insurance paperwork, claim photos, financial details, or personal information through Kefiw unless a page explicitly explains how that information is handled.
Before you sign anything
A restoration authorization can be broader than it looks. Before signing, ask what work you are authorizing, what price is known, what price is still unknown, whether demolition is included, whether rebuild is separate, and what you personally owe if insurance does not pay the full amount.
Compare this bidWhat equipment does
Air movers move air across wet materials, dehumidifiers remove moisture from air, and air scrubbers may be used when airborne particles or containment concerns exist.
Why days matter
A small daily equipment charge can become a large invoice when equipment count, days, and pickup standards are unclear.
What to ask
Ask how many pieces, how many days, what readings support pickup, what monitoring was done, and what completion proof you receive.
Restoration bid red flags
| Red flag | Why it matters | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| No moisture readings | Drying is not proven | Which materials were tested and what were the readings? |
| Equipment days not itemized | Bill can grow quickly | How many days and what pickup standard? |
| Rebuild bundled vaguely | Cleanup and repair are different scopes | What exactly is included after drying? |
| Insurance language unclear | User may still owe the bill | What am I personally responsible for? |
| Demolition vague | More property may be removed than expected | What is being removed and why? |
| Contents not addressed | Personal property can become a separate loss | What gets cleaned, moved, discarded, or inventoried? |
| No exclusions listed | Missing work appears later | What is not included? |
Related next steps
Next: estimate, collect proof, compare the bid, then decide
Damage pages should end in a visible next action: calculator, checklist, decision packet, bid checker, or qualified professional question. Do not turn an unsafe room, vague contract, or policy-specific coverage question into a simple number.
Printable packet hook
The checklist content is visible on Kefiw. Use the printable packet only if you want a page to bring to the restoration company, adjuster, spouse, realtor, or rebuild contractor conversation.
Need a line-item estimate?
Use the questions above before building an estimate or talking with a restoration, rebuild, plumbing, roof, HVAC, mold, sewer, or fire/smoke provider. A cleaner quote separates emergency mitigation, cleanup, contents, and reconstruction instead of bundling everything into one vague number.
Kefiw does not adjust claims, interpret your specific policy, receive private claim documents, guarantee coverage, or tell you to delay emergency safety work.
Source links used for Damage pages
- EPA mold, moisture, and drying guidance Moisture control, 24-48 hour drying window, contaminated-water cautions, and professional cleanup boundaries.
- FloodSmart NFIP coverage overview Flood coverage limits, separate building/contents coverage, separate deductibles, and waiting-period language.
- NAIC flood insurance consumer guide Consumer framing for homeowners water events, flood coverage, water backup riders, and NFIP limits.