OVERVIEW
Water intrusion follows structural pathways — it travels through wall cavities, along framing members, underneath flooring, and between building assemblies in ways that are entirely invisible at the surface. A wet ceiling stain is not the location of the moisture problem. It is the location where moisture eventually broke through to the surface after traveling through the building for an unknown distance.
Moisture mapping uses calibrated instrumentation — moisture meters, thermal imaging cameras, and relative humidity sensors — to trace those pathways precisely. The result is a documented map of every location where moisture is present in the structure, at what concentration, and in what materials. That map becomes the technical foundation on which a remediation scope of work is built — ensuring that the work addresses everything that needs to be addressed, and nothing that doesn't.
WHY SCOPE ACCURACY MATTERS FINANCIALLY
An under-scoped remediation misses affected materials, allows mold to develop in areas that weren't dried or treated, and produces a property that needs remediation again within months. An over-scoped remediation demolishes and replaces materials that were not actually affected — adding cost with no benefit. Moisture mapping eliminates both outcomes by defining the scope from instrument data rather than visual inspection alone.
Distance moisture typically travels beyond the visible surface evidence of intrusion
Of moisture mapping reports include thermal imaging documentation alongside meter readings
Precise location logging — every reading is tied to a documented point in the structure
WHERE IT'S USED
OUR PROCESS
CLIENT REVIEWS
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
SERVICE AREA
EXPLORE MORE
Moisture mapping defines the scope before drying begins and verifies completion after — ensuring drying equipment is placed correctly and all affected materials reach dry standard.
Moisture mapping at peak post-storm conditions is a core component of loss documentation — capturing the moisture data that most accurately represents the full extent of storm damage for insurance purposes.
Where moisture mapping identifies active moisture conditions that have existed long enough to support mold growth, mold testing confirms whether colonization has occurred before the remediation scope is finalized.
The moisture map report is the primary technical input for scope of work creation — translating documented moisture boundaries and material conditions into a precise, actionable remediation protocol.