Licensed biohazard remediation built around a realtor’s priorities — speed, documentation, and direct insurance billing.
Properties with known or suspected meth-lab history require certified decontamination and state clearance before they can be listed. Realtors must ensure remediation is complete and documented — most states require disclosure to buyers regardless of remediation.
Properties suspected of meth-lab history require certified testing followed by remediation if levels exceed state threshold. Specialists handle the full process.
Foreclosed properties occasionally come to market with undisclosed meth contamination. Specialists work directly with banks on testing, remediation, and clearance.
When a buyer requests meth testing as a condition, specialists provide certified industrial-hygienist sampling. Affordable single-property testing supports either side.
Insurance rarely covers meth contamination. Seller, estate, or bank pays. State disclosure laws typically require ongoing disclosure to buyers even after remediation.
If there's any history suggesting meth use or manufacturing, yes. Pre-listing testing prevents surprise during the buyer's inspection.
7–21 days from initial testing through clearance — paced by laboratory turnaround.
Most states require disclosure of meth-contamination history, even after remediation. Clearance certificate supports the disclosure conversation.
Typically $300–$500 for a residential property. Certified industrial-hygienist sampling.
Yes. Most vendors handle REO remediation directly with asset managers.
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