First 15 minutes
Decide whether the property is safe to enter, keep people away from water with electrical, sewage, gas, or structural concerns, and start a simple written record from a safe place.
Interactive cleanup tool
A moisture map helps organize where water may still be hiding before a property owner assumes the room is dry or starts repairs. This guide explains what to do first, what cleanup usually involves, what to document, what insurance may ask, and when to open a live chat instead of guessing.
Moisture Map Planner for Texas Water Damage starts with safety, documentation, water-source identification, cleanup prioritization, drying, and records. In Texas, the right next step depends on whether water came from flooding, stormwater, sewage, a roof opening, plumbing, or an appliance failure.
Texas recovery tools
These tools are built for written intake, documentation, source comparison, and property-role clarity. They support chat-first conversion without manufactured urgency or phone pressure.
Open the master toolkit for worksheets, photo packets, timelines, role paths, and floodplain questions.
ToolTurn a messy flood or leak event into a clear written intake summary with risk flags.
ToolUse a guided, no-chat worksheet to route the situation to the right guide and written summary.
ToolBuild print-ready photo, insurance, timeline, county, and renter-landlord worksheets.
ToolCompare water source, timing, contamination, materials, and Texas drying questions.
ToolOrganize photos, receipts, cause-of-loss questions, policy type, and official-resource notes.
ToolMap zones, employees, customers, inventory, equipment, tenants, and business interruption notes.
ToolTrack units, tenant reports, common areas, safety issues, maintenance records, and documentation.
ToolMap likely hidden moisture by room, material, water source, and time wet.
ToolCreate a room-by-room photo plan before cleanup changes the damage record.
ToolKeep damaged belongings, business stock, records, photos, receipts, and disposal notes organized.
ToolTrack when water entered, what happened next, and which cleanup records were created.
ToolPrepare local floodplain and repair-sequencing questions before permanent work moves too fast.
ToolOrganize access, safety, documentation, and reentry questions for managed properties.
ToolUse county official links, regional context, property types, and documentation notes together.
Texas Flood Recovery Toolkit
Pick the packet you need, enter what you know, label what is unknown, and download a plain-text worksheet that can sit beside photos, receipts, insurer notes, landlord messages, or local resource instructions.
Worksheet output
Wide shots, closeups, water lines, source clues, contents, receipts, and cleanup phases.
2026 intake utility
Approximate answers are okay. The goal is to understand the water source, timing, safety concerns, and property type. Do not risk safety to complete every field.
Moisture map planner
Use this to create a first-pass moisture map before opening damage intake. It is not a drying certification or DIY demolition plan.
Photo log builder
Use this before cleanup changes the scene. Do not enter unsafe rooms or contaminated water just to take photos.
Start with safety. Stay out if there is standing water near electricity, structural damage, gas odor, sewage, chemical contamination, unstable flooring, or local warnings. If it is safe to enter, document damage with photos and video before moving items, then begin water removal and drying or start a live chat to describe the damage.
Coverage depends on the policy and the source of water. Texas Department of Insurance guidance says standard home policies generally do not cover flood damage from rising water and that flood insurance is separate. Sudden accidental plumbing water, roof-openings from covered wind damage, sewer backups, and mold may be handled differently depending on endorsements and exclusions.
Mold risk can develop quickly when wet materials remain damp, especially in Texas humidity. The practical goal is to remove standing water, expose wet materials, reduce indoor humidity, and verify drying as soon as conditions are safe. No site can guarantee mold prevention, especially after contaminated water or delayed drying.
Sewage and black water can contain pathogens and other contaminants. Avoid contact, keep children and pets away, and do not use electrical equipment in wet contaminated areas. Large or contaminated losses usually require professional cleanup, controlled removal, cleaning, disinfection, drying, and documentation.
You should follow your policy, adjuster, FEMA, TDEM, and local instructions, but many official recovery resources emphasize documenting damage and taking reasonable steps to prevent additional damage when it is safe. Take photos and videos first, keep samples or lists when requested, separate damaged and undamaged items, and save receipts.