Licensed biohazard remediation built around a realtor’s priorities — speed, documentation, and direct insurance billing.
Properties with drug-activity history — use, distribution, or manufacturing — typically require professional decontamination before they can be listed. State disclosure laws often apply; clearance documentation supports the listing.
Drug-affected properties need biohazard cleanup, possibly residue testing, and clearance documentation before being listed. Specialists handle the full scope.
REO and estate properties sometimes come to market with disclosed drug history. Specialists work directly with banks or executors on remediation.
If there's reason to suspect fentanyl or meth manufacturing, specialized testing is required to determine the scope.
Insurance rarely covers tenant-caused drug contamination. Seller or estate typically pays. State disclosure obligations may apply.
If history suggests, yes. Testing determines scope and state clearance requirements.
Most states require disclosure of known drug manufacturing or significant contamination. Consult a real estate attorney.
5–14 days for residential properties; longer for meth-lab clearance.
Seller, estate, or bank. Realtors don't pay.
Yes. Most vendors handle REO and estate billing directly.
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