Emergency Water Extraction services in Tulsa
Need a emergency water extraction in Tulsa? You've got two real options: roll the dice on a Yelp listing, or call a shop that's been working in your zip code for a while. We're the second one. Our pricing's flat-rate, our techs are state-licensed, and our trucks have parts on them. Most jobs done the same visit.
The actual work
Standing water needs to come out within the first 4 to 8 hours of a water event. Past that window, drywall, flooring, and substrate begin absorbing moisture into adjacent dry areas, multiplying the loss.
Our extraction trucks carry submersible pumps for deep standing water plus truck-mounted vacuum extractors for carpet, padding, and porous surfaces. We can extract 2,000+ gallons per hour from a single building.
On arrival, the crew lead does a moisture map of the affected area, identifies the source (if not already controlled), and starts extraction in the lowest, deepest, slowest-evaporating areas first. Drying equipment goes in immediately after extraction.
Documentation is part of the job. Every moisture reading, every gallon extracted, every piece of equipment is logged. That logbook becomes your insurance-claim evidence.
Notes on Tulsa housing stock
Climate and housing age in Tulsa tend to drive specific failure patterns. We see the same handful of issues every season.
On bigger jobs we'll bring two techs. On simpler ones, just one — fewer hands, faster billing.
Price expectations
For emergency water extraction jobs in the Tulsa area:
- Emergency dispatch fee: $85 – $230
- Standing-water extraction (per 1000 sqft affected): $600 – $1,290
- Truck-mounted carpet extraction: $0.40 – $0.85 per sqft
- Drying setup (5-day standard): $1,290 – $2,575 per affected zone
Other services we run in Tulsa
- Basement Flooding Cleanup in Tulsa
- Sewage Cleanup in Tulsa
- Burst Pipe Cleanup & Restoration in Tulsa
- Fire & Smoke Damage Restoration in Tulsa
A recent emergency water extraction call
Last spring we got a call from a homeowner near the east Tulsa. A basement with 18 inches of clean water after a hot water tank burst. Diagnosis: tank corrosion at the seam. We pumped 4,200 gallons in 2 hours, extracted absorbed water from carpet, drying setup in place by midnight, ran the test, and were out the door in the same visit. Total: $262 including parts.