A professional, insurance-aware playbook for water damage, fire, and mold remediation firms — timing, templates, and the filter layer that protects your rating when claims get complicated.
Restoration is not like other home services. When a homeowner searches for "water damage company near me" at 2 a.m. with three inches of water on the floor, they are not browsing. They are panicking — and the first firm that looks credible wins the job. Google reviews are the single strongest credibility signal in that moment.
But the audience is deeper than the homeowner alone. Insurance adjusters, TPAs, and program managers increasingly vet contractors on Google before approving work. A 4.9-star firm with 300 reviews gets added to preferred-vendor lists. A 3.7-star firm with 24 reviews gets quietly dropped. The revenue difference between those two outcomes is measured in seven figures a year.
This guide is written for water damage, fire, mold, and reconstruction firms — the companies doing emotionally intense, multi-week, insurance-paid work where a single mishandled review can cost a referral relationship. It covers timing, channel strategy, templates, the filter layer that protects your rating during disputed claims, and how Google reviews compound with adjuster referrals and IICRC credibility to build a defensible lead pipeline.
of homeowners read restoration-firm reviews before calling during an active loss
BrightLocal
of insurance adjusters check Google reviews before recommending a preferred vendor
RIA Industry Survey
average rating threshold required on most insurance-carrier preferred-vendor programs
Industry Average
See the Reveo Restoration Playbook →
In most home services, you finish the job and ask for a review within two hours. Restoration breaks that rule. A water loss job typically has two emotional peaks: the moment mitigation is complete and the home is dry, safe, and stable — and the moment the rebuild is finished and the homeowner is back to normal. Those peaks can be six to twelve weeks apart. Asking only once means leaving the second, deeper review on the table.
We recommend a two-phase review strategy tuned to how restoration jobs actually unfold:
Phase one — after mitigation complete. Send the first review request within 48 hours of final moisture reading, containment breakdown, or fire/mold clearance. The homeowner has just watched your team stabilize the worst day of their year. The relief is real and the gratitude is high. This is the emotional peak where five-star reviews are written.
Phase two — after rebuild / final walkthrough. If your firm also handles reconstruction, send a second request two to five days after the final walkthrough. This review is longer, more detailed, and usually mentions specific project managers, the insurance process, and the finished result. These are the reviews adjusters read most carefully.
Avoid asking during the middle phase — the weeks when contents are packed out, the home is a construction zone, and frustration peaks. Asking during the low point produces negative reviews about a process that is proceeding exactly as it should.
Rule of thumb: restoration firms that split review requests across mitigation and rebuild generate 1.7× more reviews per job than firms that only ask once at the end.
Most review-generation advice tells you to lead with SMS because open rates run 98%. That is true for a one-hour HVAC tune-up. It is the wrong default for restoration. Your jobs last weeks, your customers sign contracts, your project managers send emails daily, and your reviews benefit from length and specificity. Email is the right primary channel. SMS is the right escalation.
Email first, within 48 hours of mitigation or walkthrough. A professional email from the project manager — not a generic brand blast — reflects the relationship you actually built. Longer reviews that mention names, insurance handling, and craftsmanship almost always originate from email-driven requests.
SMS follow-up three to five days later. For customers who did not respond to the email, a brief SMS from the assigned project manager's business number recovers another 20 to 30% of reviews. Keep it short, reference the project, and link directly to Google.
Never send during a claim dispute. If supplement negotiation or a coverage disagreement is active, pause the automation. Reveo lets you flag jobs as "claim-sensitive" so requests are held until the dispute resolves.
Generic "please review us" copy underperforms in restoration by a wide margin. These customers went through something traumatic, and your message needs to acknowledge that before it asks for anything. Below are four field-tested templates you can lift directly.
Subject: Your home is dry, {{CustomerFirstName}} — one quick favor
Hi {{CustomerFirstName}}, the final moisture readings on your {{LossType}} loss came back in spec today, so the equipment is off and the drying phase is officially complete. I know this stretch has not been easy. If {{ProjectManagerFirstName}} and the crew handled things well, a short Google review would mean a lot — adjusters and future homeowners rely on them heavily when something like this happens to them.
It takes about 60 seconds: {{GoogleReviewLink}}
Subject: Soot and smoke cleared — thank you for trusting us, {{CustomerFirstName}}
{{CustomerFirstName}}, cleanup and contents at {{LossAddress}} are complete and your indoor air readings are back to baseline. A fire loss is one of the hardest things a family can go through, and we are grateful you let our team walk through it with you. If you have a moment, a short Google review about {{ProjectManagerFirstName}} or the crew helps other families find us on their worst day.
{{GoogleReviewLink}}
Subject: Clearance passed — your home is safe again
Hi {{CustomerFirstName}}, post-remediation verification at {{LossAddress}} passed today. The affected area is back below actionable spore counts and the containment is down. Mold work is invisible when it is done correctly, so customer reviews are how other homeowners (and our industrial hygienist partners) find us. If our process earned your trust, a quick Google review would genuinely help.
{{GoogleReviewLink}}
Subject: Welcome home, {{CustomerFirstName}} — one last favor
{{CustomerFirstName}}, it has been {{WeeksSinceLoss}} weeks since we met you at the worst moment, and today we handed the keys back. Every member of this team — from the emergency crew to {{ProjectManagerFirstName}} and the reconstruction carpenters — cared about getting your home back to you. If the finished product reflects that, a detailed Google review helps us protect our place on insurance-preferred lists and helps the next family choose confidently.
{{GoogleReviewLink}}
Google explicitly prohibits review gating — the practice of asking satisfied customers for a public review while redirecting unhappy ones to a private form. That rule applies to restoration too. But restoration has a legitimate, Google-compliant version of this same problem: you are allowed (and encouraged) to ask every customer for feedback through a first-party survey. What you do with that feedback is the operational layer that protects your rating.
Here is how a compliant filter works in restoration specifically:
Send a brief post-job survey first. Single NPS question plus one open-ended prompt. All customers receive it. This is legal, welcomed, and generates the operational intel your production manager needs.
After the survey, every customer is invited to review on Google. No gating. Promoters and detractors both see the Google prompt. Google's policy is satisfied.
Low-NPS customers trigger a human recovery call within 24 hours. A project manager calls, acknowledges the issue, and resolves what can be resolved. Most detractors, once heard, either do not post or post a measured review that acknowledges the recovery.
Claim-dispute jobs pause automation automatically. If the customer is in active disagreement with the carrier over scope, supplements, or secondary damage, automated review requests suppress until the dispute resolves — because those reviews are almost never about your work.
This operational layer is critical in restoration because a single public review blaming you for a claim outcome that was actually a carrier decision can cost 2 to 3 referral relationships. The filter protects your Google rating without violating Google's rules.
Google reviews do not exist in isolation for restoration firms. They reinforce — and are reinforced by — two other signals that drive your lead pipeline: insurance-adjuster referrals and industry-credential visibility (IICRC certifications, RIA membership, NAIC compliance indicators). When all three are strong, lead flow compounds in a way single-channel firms cannot match.
Adjuster referrals fuel reviews. Insurance-referred customers are typically higher-value jobs with longer engagements. A great experience on one of these becomes a 200-word Google review that explicitly names the carrier. That review now recruits the next homeowner who searches "{{CarrierName}} approved water damage contractor."
Google rankings fuel credentials visibility. A firm in the local 3-pack gets its IICRC, WRT, ASD, and AMRT credentials seen by both homeowners and adjusters. Credentials posted on a site nobody finds have zero leverage. Credentials attached to a top-ranked Business Profile become revenue.
Credentials fuel adjuster referrals. Preferred-vendor programs require documented certifications, insurance, and — increasingly — a Google rating above a minimum threshold. The same review velocity that lifts rankings also clears the preferred-vendor bar, which brings more referrals, which produces more reviews. The loop closes.
"Our two-phase review cadence through Reveo lifted us from a 4.3 to a 4.8 in ninety days. Two carriers added us back to their preferred list the quarter after. It paid for itself on the first referral."
— Restoration Firm Owner, Midwest
Two-phase review cadence, claim-sensitive pause, and adjuster-ready reporting — all automated.
Two-phase cadence, templates, and claim-safe automation
Download FreeRestoration-specific questions about Google review strategy.
Wait until the phase you are reviewing is complete — mitigation is a separate milestone from rebuild, and each can be reviewed independently. You can absolutely request a review for mitigation even if the rebuild and claim are still active, as long as the customer is not in dispute with the carrier. If supplements or coverage are actively contested, pause review automation until the dispute resolves. Reveo flags claim-sensitive jobs automatically.
Yes, and it matters. Carrier-referred customers often write reviews that mention the carrier by name, which creates a permanent lead magnet for other policyholders searching for approved contractors. Encourage this naturally — the review template for these jobs can note "thank you for letting us work with your {{CarrierName}} claim." Never script what the customer should write. Just open the door.
Use the two-phase cadence: mitigation review within 48 hours of drying complete, rebuild review two to five days after final walkthrough. For unusually long reconstruction projects, a mid-project update (not a review request) keeps the customer engaged so the final review still carries the emotional weight of the finished product rather than fatigue from the process.
CAT events produce a natural review spike because job volume spikes. Google's algorithms generally tolerate this because the activity matches your historical pattern for your storm season. Two guardrails: first, stagger requests across days rather than blasting 200 requests in one hour — that does look unnatural. Second, do not relax quality control during CAT because a surge of poorly handled jobs produces a surge of negative reviews that will outlast the event by years.
Thresholds vary by carrier, but most programs now require a Google rating of at least 4.5 stars with a minimum review count (often 50 to 100). Some TPAs have moved to 4.7. The two-phase cadence plus the filter-before-Google operational layer is what reliably keeps restoration firms above 4.7, even after occasional difficult claims. Track the threshold for each carrier you work with and review it quarterly.