Licensed biohazard remediation built around a realtor’s priorities — speed, documentation, and direct insurance billing.
Properties affected by hoarding cannot be listed in their current condition. Realtors need vendors who handle the full cleanup scope, identify any underlying structural or biohazard issues, and produce documentation supporting disclosure obligations.
Hoarded properties combine accumulated waste, biohazard contamination, pest infestation, and often structural damage. Specialists handle the full scope and document everything for the listing.
When a hoarder dies and the estate inherits the property, executors need vendors who handle the full scope and bill the estate directly.
Severe hoarding hides structural damage (mold, water, pest, fire risk). Specialists assess during cleanup so the listing can disclose accurately.
Hoarding cleanup typically not covered by insurance. Underlying damage may be covered if a covered event triggered it. Estate or seller pays out-of-pocket. Documentation supports disclosure.
Almost always seller, estate, or bank. Realtors don't pay; you provide the introduction.
1–3 weeks for cleanup; longer if structural restoration is needed.
State laws vary. Underlying damage discovered during cleanup may need to be disclosed.
Yes. Many vendors routinely work with executors and probate attorneys on hoarding-property remediation.
Yes — if biohazard is discovered, that scope is typically separate. Some carriers cover biohazard but not the underlying hoarding.
Get free quotes from verified hoarding cleanup companies experienced with realtors. 24/7 dispatch, no per-call fees.