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Water Damage Restoration in Daytona Beach, FL

Volusia County has 44 federally-declared disasters on record — led by hurricane events; recent declarations include Hurricane Milton and Tropical Storm Debby (FEMA) — and the area averages about 49.6" of precipitation a year (NOAA). 35 of those declarations are tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms. 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 Daytona Beach metro area and respond fast.

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Volusia County · Florida · Map © OpenStreetMap contributors

Local flood risk in Daytona Beach

Updated Jul 6, 2026, 4:54 PM EDT
Flood risk level: Low risk

No active flood alerts

As of 2026-07-06, there are no active flood or storm alerts for this area. Atlantic hurricane season (Jun–Nov) is active — risk can change quickly.

0.53″ rain forecast next 24h Atlantic hurricane season active (Jun–Nov)

Live data: NWS — active alerts & precipitation forecast (api.weather.gov) · NOAA NHC — active tropical cyclones

Water-damage risk in Daytona Beach

44

federally-declared disasters in Volusia County

49.6"

average annual precipitation

35

tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms

Recent federally-declared events

  • Hurricane Milton (2024 · Hurricane)
  • Tropical Storm Debby (2024 · Tropical Storm)
  • Tropical Storm Idalia (2023 · Tropical Storm)
  • Hurricane Nicole (2022 · Hurricane)
  • Tropical Storm Ian (2022 · Hurricane)

Daytona Beach averages about 49.6" of precipitation a year (NOAA), and Volusia County's 44 federally-declared disasters skew toward hurricane events; recent declarations include Hurricane Milton and Tropical Storm Debby (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 Daytona Beach metro area, including Beachside, Downtown, Holly Hill, South Daytona, DeLand, Deltona, New Smyrna Beach — and ZIP codes such as 32114, 32117, 32118, 32119, 32127.

Sources: FEMA OpenFEMA — federally-declared disaster history (county FIPS 12127) · NOAA NCEI — 1991–2020 Climate Normals (station USW00012834)

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.

What does it cost in Daytona Beach?

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 Daytona Beach — 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 Daytona Beach?
Local water damage restoration companies in the DisasterStatus network serve the Daytona Beach metro area (including DeLand, Deltona, New Smyrna Beach) 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 Daytona Beach area — the on-site work is handled directly by that local pro, not by DisasterStatus.
Is water damage common in Daytona Beach?
Yes — Volusia County has 44 federally-declared disasters on record, with 35 tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms, and gets about 49.6" of rain a year (FEMA; 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.

Nearby coverage

Water Damage Restoration near Daytona Beach

Counties served: Volusia County

Mold remediation in Daytona Beach →

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