You step out of bed and your foot hits cold water.
Not a little water. Not a damp spot. Water. On your bedroom floor. In the dark.
Your heart is pounding. You have no idea where it's coming from. You don't know if it's safe to walk through. You don't know if you should call your insurance company first or a restoration company first, or whether to wait until morning.
This article is for that exact moment — and for the days after it, when the initial panic fades and the confusing, expensive process of getting your home back to normal begins. We've responded to thousands of water damage calls across the Charlotte metro since 2009, and most homeowners make the same costly mistakes. Here's how to avoid them.
Why Charlotte Homes Are Especially Vulnerable
Charlotte isn't just rainy — it's specifically problematic for water damage in ways most generic home guides don't mention.
The region averages 43 inches of rain per year, but the real issue is the clay soil underneath most of the metro. Unlike sandy soil that drains quickly, Charlotte's red clay becomes nearly impermeable when saturated. Water has nowhere to go except toward your foundation.
Specific neighborhoods and developments that we respond to repeatedly:
Ballantyne and south Charlotte — Heavy concentration of homes built on concrete slab foundations. When supply lines under the slab develop a pinhole leak, water travels under the entire floor before anyone notices. By the time your tile feels warm or your water bill spikes, you may have significant hidden damage.
Steele Creek and Lake Wylie corridor — Low-lying areas with flooding risk after heavy storms. The rapid development of this area over the last 17 years has strained local drainage infrastructure.
Dilworth, Plaza Midwood, NoDa — Older homes with original cast iron drain lines and galvanized supply pipes. When these go, they go fast, and the water often hits finished basements that weren't originally built as living space.
Fort Mill and Indian Land — Newer construction that looks pristine but has its own vulnerability: builders moving fast sometimes cut corners on waterproofing around tubs, showers, and exterior penetrations. Slow leaks inside walls can go undetected for months.
And everywhere in Charlotte, there's the humidity factor. Charlotte's average humidity is around 58%, which means once moisture gets into your walls, ceilings, or flooring, it has nowhere to evaporate to. The drying window before mold takes hold is shorter here than in drier climates. This is not the place to take a wait-and-see approach.
The First 60 Minutes: What to Do (and What Not to Do)
Most water damage guides tell you what to do. Few tell you what not to do — and the mistakes made in the first hour are often the ones that turn a $4,000 claim into a $20,000 one.
Don't use a shop vac if the water source is your toilet, sewage line, or a drain backup. Category 3 water contains pathogens that aerosolize when you vacuum or disturb them. Leave it alone and call a professional immediately.
Don't run fans directly on wet carpet if there's hardwood or a wood subfloor underneath. This forces moisture down through the carpet pad into the wood, causing the subfloor to swell and cup — damage far more expensive to fix than the carpet itself.
Don't call your insurance company before you've documented everything yourself. Take video of every affected room, every visible water source, every damaged item, before anything is moved or touched. Once the adjuster visits, your documentation is your leverage.
Don't wait to see if it dries out on its own. In Charlotte's humidity, mold colonization can begin within 24–48 hours inside walls and under flooring. By the time you can see or smell it, it's already widespread. Remediation costs more than early drying — significantly more.
Don't remove baseboards or open up walls yourself unless you're prepared to document moisture readings before and after. Insurance adjusters sometimes dispute claims when homeowners have already disturbed the evidence.
What to do:
- Step 1: Find and stop the source. Main water shutoff is typically near where the line enters your home — in the garage, crawl space, or utility room. If you don't know where yours is, find it right now before you need it.
- Step 2: Cut power to affected areas. If there's standing water near outlets, panels, or appliances, flip the breakers and stay out until an electrician clears it.
- Step 3: Take comprehensive video documentation — narrate as you go. That kind of documentation is worth thousands in a claim dispute.
- Step 4: Call a restoration company before your insurance company. A professional assessment with moisture readings strengthens your claim. Your insurer wants to settle; documented professional assessment makes it harder to lowball you.
The Insurance Piece: What Nobody Explains Clearly
Sudden and accidental water damage — a burst pipe, a washing machine hose that fails, a water heater that ruptures — is typically covered by standard homeowner's insurance.
Flooding from outside your home — storm surge, rising groundwater, water that enters because the ground is saturated — requires separate flood insurance. Most Charlotte homeowners don't have it.
Gradual leaks are almost always denied. Insurers argue these were preventable with routine maintenance.
What we do at STOP Restoration is assign a dedicated point of contact to manage your claim alongside you. We've worked with every major insurer in the Charlotte market — Allstate, State Farm, USAA, Nationwide, Erie — and we know their documentation requirements. Homeowners who go through the process alone consistently get lower settlements than those who have a professional restoration company documenting on their behalf from day one.
What Professional Restoration Actually Looks Like
Assessment starts with thermal imaging cameras and moisture meters, not eyeballing the damage. Water travels through wall cavities, under flooring, into insulation in ways that aren't visible. We map moisture content throughout the structure before any equipment goes in.
Extraction uses portable extraction equipment capable of removing hundreds of gallons quickly. The difference between 30 minutes and 3 hours of standing water is often the difference between saving your hardwood floors and replacing them.
Structural drying is a science, not just putting fans in a room. In Charlotte's humidity, this phase typically runs 3–5 days, with moisture readings taken daily.
Antimicrobial treatment covers all affected surfaces before reconstruction — our treatment is 99.9% effective, 100% green, and completely safe for people, elderly, children, animals, and plants. This is the step homeowners most often skip when attempting DIY drying, and it's why mold shows up three months later inside a wall that seemed fine.
Reconstruction — drywall, flooring, paint, trim — is handled by our team. You don't have to coordinate a separate contractor after the drying crew leaves.
What Does This Cost in Charlotte?
- Minor damage (small area, caught within hours): $1,500–$4,000
- Moderate damage (one or two rooms, drywall and flooring involved): $4,000–$10,000
- Major damage (multiple rooms, structural drying, subfloor affected): $10,000–$25,000
- Severe flooding (multiple floors, category 3 water): $25,000–$60,000+
If you have homeowner's insurance that covers the event, your out-of-pocket is your deductible plus anything the insurer disputes. Proper documentation and a professional restoration company advocating alongside you makes a real difference in what that final number looks like.
A Word From Caley
STOP Restoration has been a family business since 2009. Caley Bergeron runs the company today, carrying on what her father built from the ground up. When you call us, you're not reaching a national call center that dispatches a crew you've never heard of. You're calling a local family that has been part of this community for 17 years and has a reputation here to protect.
Water damage calls come in at 2am on Christmas Eve and at 6am on a Sunday in August. We answer them the same way every time. Our 4.9-star rating across nearly 200 reviews isn't because we're the cheapest option in Charlotte — it's because when your house is flooding, we treat it like our own.
If you're dealing with water damage right now, call us. If you're reading this to be prepared, save our number: (803) 866-9848. We're in Fort Mill, minutes from anywhere in the Charlotte metro.
Free estimates. We handle the insurance paperwork. We're here 24/7.