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Fire damage restoration is typically the most expensive category of property restoration — and the cost range is wider than almost any other type of damage. A contained kitchen fire with smoke damage to one room and a whole-house structural fire are both “fire damage” but they produce costs that differ by hundreds of thousands of dollars. This page breaks down realistic fire damage restoration costs in Houston by scope so you understand what you are facing before the first contractor walks through your door.
Minor fire damage jobs involve a small, contained fire — typically a kitchen or appliance fire — with smoke and soot damage limited to one or two rooms and no structural damage. Costs cover soot removal, odor elimination, HVAC cleaning, and surface restoration. No structural repairs or reconstruction required. These jobs are typically completed within a few days.
Moderate fire damage jobs involve a fire that spread beyond its origin point but was contained to a portion of the structure. Structural repairs are required in the fire origin area. Smoke and soot damage affects multiple rooms requiring professional cleaning throughout. Water damage from firefighting efforts requires extraction and drying. These jobs take 2–4 weeks from emergency response through reconstruction completion.
Significant fire damage jobs involve fires that spread through a substantial portion of the structure — a full floor, an entire wing, or a fire that burned for an extended period before suppression. Extensive structural repairs or partial rebuild are required. Smoke damage affects the entire structure including HVAC systems. Contents losses are substantial. These jobs take 4–12 weeks and involve multiple trades coordinated through a general restoration contractor.
Severe fire damage jobs involve fires that consumed a majority of the structure or caused collapse of primary structural systems. In some cases the structure must be demolished and rebuilt entirely. Total loss determinations by insurance carriers are common at this level. These projects are measured in months and involve full reconstruction rather than restoration.
Emergency boarding of windows, doors, and roof openings to secure the property after a fire. Cost depends on the number of openings requiring protection and whether roof tarping is needed.
Professional smoke and soot removal from all affected surfaces throughout the structure. Cost is driven by the square footage affected, the type of smoke residue involved, and whether HVAC system cleaning is required. Wet smoke residue from synthetic material fires costs significantly more to clean than dry smoke residue.
Thermal fogging, ozone treatment, and hydroxyl generator deployment to neutralize smoke odor in porous materials. Cost depends on the size of the affected area and the severity of odor penetration.
Extraction and drying of water introduced by firefighting efforts. Virtually every structural fire involves significant water damage from suppression — this cost is a standard component of fire restoration that many homeowners do not anticipate.
Repair and replacement of fire-damaged structural elements — framing, roofing, drywall, flooring, windows, doors, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC. This is the most variable cost component and depends entirely on how much of the structure was damaged by the fire itself.
Professional cleaning, restoration, and storage of smoke-damaged personal property and furnishings. Cost depends on the volume of contents affected and the extent of smoke and soot damage to individual items.
The longer a fire burns and the larger the area it affects before suppression, the greater the structural damage and the wider the smoke and soot distribution throughout the property. Response time from ignition to suppression is the single largest determinant of total restoration cost.
Synthetic materials — plastics, foam, rubber — produce wet smoke residue that is far more difficult and expensive to clean than dry smoke from natural materials like wood. A fire involving synthetic furniture or building materials in an enclosed space can distribute extremely difficult wet smoke residue throughout an entire structure even if the fire itself was small.
Firefighting water is aggressive. A structure fire that required significant suppression efforts can have tens of thousands of gallons of water distributed throughout the building. This water must be extracted, the structure dried, and mold prevention applied — adding substantial cost on top of the fire damage restoration itself.
HVAC systems that were running during a fire distribute smoke throughout the entire structure — including rooms with no fire or direct smoke contact. Full HVAC system cleaning or component replacement is required before the system can be safely operated again, adding cost regardless of where the fire originated.
Fire damage is one of the most universally covered perils under standard Texas homeowner’s insurance policies. Structural damage, smoke damage, water damage from firefighting, and additional living expenses during restoration are all typically covered. Contents losses are covered under the personal property portion of your policy. The primary cost variables from an insurance perspective are your deductible and whether your policy provides replacement cost value or actual cash value for contents — replacement cost value coverage pays to replace items at current prices while actual cash value coverage factors in depreciation. We work directly with your adjuster and provide complete documentation to support the maximum covered settlement.
Smoke damage cleanup from a contained kitchen fire, electrical fire, or smoke intrusion from an adjacent property typically costs $1,500 to $8,000 depending on how widely smoke distributed through the structure and the type of residue involved. Protein residue from kitchen fires and wet smoke from synthetic material fires are at the higher end of the range due to cleaning difficulty.
Minor smoke damage jobs can be completed in 2–5 days. Moderate structural fire restoration takes 3–6 weeks. Significant fires requiring substantial reconstruction take 2–6 months. Total loss rebuilds take 6–18 months depending on permitting, material availability, and construction scheduling. We provide a detailed project timeline after our initial assessment.
Many smoke-damaged items can be professionally restored including furniture, clothing, electronics, documents, photographs, and artwork. Items directly burned or exposed to extreme heat are typically total losses. Professional contents cleaning using ultrasonic equipment, ozone treatment, and specialized cleaning chemistry can restore items that appear beyond saving. We assess every item individually and document restoration versus replacement recommendations for your insurance claim.
Ensure everyone is safe and do not re-enter the property until fire officials confirm it is structurally sound and safe to enter. Once cleared, call 247 Restoration Specialists and your insurance company simultaneously. Document all visible damage with photographs before anything is touched or moved. Do not attempt to clean soot from walls or ceilings — improper cleaning permanently sets stains and makes professional restoration more difficult and expensive.
We provide fire damage restoration throughout greater Houston including Katy, Cypress, Sugar Land, Pearland, Humble, Bellaire, and surrounding communities.