The First Two Hours Decide Everything
Before you call your insurance company, before you call anyone, you need to do two things at the same time. Stop the water and start documenting. Shut off the main valve if the source is plumbing related, kill power to any affected rooms at the breaker if water is anywhere near outlets, and then pull out your phone. Photograph every wet surface, every soaked piece of furniture, every wall stain, every ceiling sag, and the actual source if you can safely see it. Take video as you walk through the space and narrate what you see. This footage becomes the spine of your claim file, and adjusters in Crooked Creek routinely tell us that homeowners who hand over time stamped photos and video get approved faster than those who rely on memory two weeks later. If water has been sitting longer than a day, you are likely already past the 48 hour mold growth window, which is its own line item on your claim and worth documenting separately.
Now call your insurance company and open the claim. Use specific language. Say sudden and accidental discharge of water if a pipe burst, because that phrase aligns with standard policy coverage. Avoid words like seepage, gradual, or long term, since those terms can trigger exclusions. Get your claim number in writing through the carrier app or email, and ask for the adjuster's name and direct line. You will need both within 24 hours. While you are on that first call, ask three specific questions and write down the answers. What is my deductible for this specific peril, what is the deadline to submit my proof of loss, and does my policy require me to use a preferred vendor network or am I free to choose my own restoration contractor. Those three answers shape every decision you make over the next thirty days, and getting them in the first conversation prevents the kind of surprises that derail claims later.
What Your Policy Actually Covers and What It Does Not
Most standard homeowners policies in Crooked Creek cover sudden water damage from internal sources, things like a burst supply line, a failed water heater, a washing machine hose that let go at 2am, or an upstairs toilet that overflowed while you were at work. What they typically do not cover is groundwater intrusion from outside, sewer backups without a specific endorsement, and damage caused by long term unaddressed leaks. This is why category matters so much. A clean water loss from a supply line is a different claim than a sewage backup, and the cleanup standards, costs, and documentation requirements are completely different. If you are unsure where your situation lands, our breakdown of Category 1 vs Category 2 vs Category 3 water damage spells out which losses your insurer is most likely to dispute and why. Read your declarations page before the adjuster arrives, specifically the dwelling coverage limit, personal property limit, loss of use coverage, and your water damage deductible, which in Crooked Creek commonly runs between one thousand and twenty five hundred dollars.
Pay close attention to endorsements and riders too. A water backup endorsement, sometimes listed as sewer and drain backup coverage, is usually a separate add on with its own sub limit, often capped between five and twenty five thousand dollars regardless of your overall dwelling limit. If you have a finished basement in Crooked Creek, that sub limit can be the difference between a fully covered restoration and tens of thousands of dollars out of pocket. Service line coverage is another common endorsement that covers damage to the buried pipes between the street and your home, which traditional policies treat as the homeowner's responsibility. Knowing exactly which endorsements you carry, and which you do not, lets you frame the claim accurately from the first phone call rather than discovering a gap halfway through reconstruction.
Bringing in a Restoration Company Before the Adjuster Arrives
Here is the part most homeowners get wrong. You do not have to wait for the adjuster to authorize mitigation work. In fact, your policy requires you to mitigate further damage, meaning if you sit on wet drywall for four days waiting on an adjuster's schedule, the carrier can deny the resulting mold remediation as a failure to mitigate. Call an IICRC certified restoration company immediately. A reputable team will arrive with moisture meters, thermal imaging cameras, and commercial extraction equipment, and they will produce a written scope of work with line item pricing that mirrors the Xactimate software your adjuster uses. That alignment is the secret. When the scope from your restoration contractor speaks the same language as the adjuster's estimating platform, approval happens fast. When it does not, you end up in a back and forth that can stretch the claim for months. At Crooked Creek Water Restoration, we write every scope in the format adjusters expect, and we share moisture mapping data directly with the carrier so there is no debate about what was wet and what was not.
While the restoration crew sets up air movers and dehumidifiers, keep a running log. Every contractor who enters the home, every piece of equipment running, every day of drying, every item removed for cleaning or disposal. Save receipts for hotel stays, restaurant meals, and any out of pocket expenses if the home is unlivable, because loss of use coverage will reimburse those costs but only if you can prove them. Our guide on the complete water damage restoration cost breakdown shows what realistic line items look like for Crooked Creek homes, which helps you spot lowball estimates fast.
Working with the Adjuster and Getting Paid
When the adjuster shows up, walk them through the home with your documentation in hand. Be factual, not emotional. Point out hidden damage behind baseboards, under cabinets, and in subfloors that they might miss on a quick visit. If your restoration contractor can be on site during the inspection, even better, because three sets of trained eyes catch more than one. The adjuster will issue an initial estimate, which is almost never the final number. Expect supplements as drying progresses and hidden damage surfaces, and do not sign any settlement labeled final payment until reconstruction is complete and you are confident nothing was missed. Payouts typically arrive in two or three installments, the first within ten to fourteen days of approval for emergency mitigation, the second for structural repairs, and the final after reconstruction. If the carrier delays or denies a portion of the claim, request the denial in writing with specific policy language cited. That paper trail is what gets disputes resolved, whether through internal escalation, a public adjuster, or in rare cases the Indiana Department of Insurance.
One last piece of advice that saves Crooked Creek homeowners thousands. Personal property claims are settled in two stages, actual cash value first and replacement cost value once you actually replace the items and submit receipts. Many homeowners accept the actual cash value check, which is depreciated, and never circle back to claim the replacement cost difference they are entitled to. Build an itemized inventory of every damaged belonging with original purchase price, approximate age, and a replacement link from a current retailer. Submit that inventory with photos, and when you replace items over the following months, send receipts to the adjuster to unlock the holdback. That single habit often recovers an extra fifteen to thirty percent of the personal property portion of the claim, money the carrier owes you but will not chase you down to pay.