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Water damage in Coconino County, AZ

Vetted, independent local water-damage pros serving the Coconino County metro — extraction, drying, repair. Fast.

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DisasterStatus is a referral service, not a restoration company. Your call goes to an independent local pro who pays us a fee. Calls may be recorded.

Coconino County has 24 federally-declared disasters on record — led by fire events; recent declarations include Tunnel 2 Fire and Pipeline Fire (FEMA). 10 of those declarations are tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms. The area averages about 16.2" of precipitation a year (NOAA). Declared disasters are only the headline losses: day to day, water damage more often starts with a burst or frozen pipe, a failed water heater or appliance line, or a roof leak — and spreads by the hour. DisasterStatus connects you with vetted, independent local water damage pros who serve the Coconino County metro area and respond fast.

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Coconino County · Arizona · Map © OpenStreetMap contributors

Local flood risk in Coconino County

Live flood-risk data for Coconino County is updating. For the current local picture, check your National Weather Service office before you act on conditions.

Water-damage risk in Coconino County

24 federally-declared disasters in Coconino County (FEMA)
16.2" average annual precipitation (NOAA)
10 tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms (FEMA)

Recent federally-declared events

  • Tunnel 2 Fire (2022 · Fire)
  • Pipeline Fire (2022 · Fire)
  • Severe Storms and Flooding (2021 · Flood)
  • Covid-19 Pandemic (2020 · Biological)
  • Covid-19 (2020 · Biological)

Coconino County averages about 16.2" of precipitation a year (NOAA). Coconino County's 24 federally-declared disasters skew toward fire events; recent declarations include Tunnel 2 Fire and Pipeline Fire (FEMA). Any of those events can put water into a home — and so can the plumbing, appliance and roof failures that never make a federal declaration.

Pros in the network serve the Coconino County metro area.

Sources: FEMA OpenFEMA — federally-declared disaster history (county FIPS 04005) · NOAA NCEI — 1991–2020 Climate Normals (GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK AIRPORT, AZ US)

State & regional context

Arizona flood statistics

Statewide figures for context — the closest official data below the metro level. FEMA NFIP flood-insurance claims, 1978–2025 (flood-policy claims only, not all water damage).

Arizona NFIP paid flood claims · source
3,543
Arizona total NFIP flood claims paid · source
$62.8M
Average paid NFIP flood claim in Arizona · source
$17,712

What a local water damage restoration pro does

  • Emergency extraction — pumps remove standing water fast.
  • Structural drying — air movers and dehumidifiers dry framing and subfloor before mold sets in.
  • Moisture mapping — meters and thermal cameras find hidden water behind walls.
  • Cleanup, repair & insurance docs — sanitizing, rebuild, and documentation for your adjuster.

Sewer & drain backups in Coconino County

A backup happens when the line that carries waste away from the home reverses — a clog or root-invaded lateral, a failed sewer main, or heavy rain and flooding overwhelming the municipal system. However it starts, what comes up is Category-3 "black water": contaminated with bacteria, viruses and parasites. It is both a health hazard and a water-damage clock, because porous materials it soaks have to be removed and the structure dried before mold sets in within 24–48 hours. That is why it is a professional, protective-equipment job, not a DIY cleanup.

The same local water damage pros handle backups — containment, extraction, removal of the porous materials the water soaked, decontamination and verified drying. One note on insurance: a standard homeowners policy often excludes sewer and drain backups unless you carry a water/sewer backup endorsement, so document everything before cleanup begins.

What does it cost in Coconino County?

Nationally, water damage restoration commonly runs from a few hundred dollars for a small, clean-water cleanup to $5,000+ for a large or contaminated-water loss — driven by the water category (clean, gray, black), the affected area, and how long it sat. Local factors in Coconino County — labor rates, the severity of the specific loss, and how accessible the damage is — affect the final number, so we don't publish a fixed local price. Get an on-site assessment from the local pro for an accurate quote.

Frequently asked questions

How fast can a water damage restoration pro reach me in Coconino County?
Local water damage restoration companies in the DisasterStatus network serve the Coconino County metro area and most offer 24/7 emergency response, aiming to be on-site within a few hours — because standing water and moisture cause more damage the longer they sit.
Does DisasterStatus do the water damage restoration work?
No. DisasterStatus is a free referral service. We connect you with vetted, independent local water damage restoration professionals who serve the Coconino County area — the on-site work is handled directly by that local pro, not by DisasterStatus.
Is water damage common in Coconino County?
Yes — Coconino County has 24 federally-declared disasters on record, with 10 tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms (FEMA). The area gets about 16.2" of rain a year (NOAA). Storms, heavy rain and plumbing failures all drive water damage here.
Is it free to get connected, and what will it cost?
Connecting through DisasterStatus is always free; we may be paid a referral fee by the pro, at no cost to you. Water Damage Restoration pricing depends on the category and extent of the damage and local factors — get an on-site assessment for an accurate number.
What if it's a sewage or sewer backup?
The same local water-damage pros handle it — a backup is Category-3 "black water" carrying bacteria, viruses and parasites, so keep people and pets away and don't clean a real backup yourself. On insurance, a standard homeowners policy often excludes sewer or drain backups unless you carry a water/sewer-backup endorsement — document everything before cleanup begins.

Local resources · Coconino County, AZ

Local water damage restoration rules & permits in Coconino County

Local rules & permits

Restoration contractors must be licensed by AZ ROC

The Arizona Registrar of Contractors (AZ ROC) licenses and regulates residential and commercial contractors statewide and investigates complaints against both licensed and unlicensed operators. Repair, remodeling and structural restoration work generally requires the appropriate ROC license classification. Arizona does not issue a separate mold-remediation license, so mold work is regulated through the general contractor-licensing framework rather than a mold-specific credential; homeowners can verify a license and complaint history on the ROC website.

Arizona Registrar of Contractors (AZ ROC)

602-542-1525

roc.az.gov

Source: roc.az.gov

These are local government rules and offices — they change and depend on your exact address. Confirm with the official source before you act.

Nearby coverage

Water Damage Restoration near Coconino County

Counties served: Coconino County

Mold remediation in Coconino County →

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