What to Do When Your Basement Floods — Emergency Checklist | GetAHomePro
What to Do When Your Basement Floods — Emergency Checklist
·4 min read
L
Lisa NguyenGeneral Contractor & Renovation Specialist
Published March 21, 2026
Key Takeaway
Basement flooding? Act fast. Emergency checklist covering safety, what NOT to do, when to call pros, insurance timelines, and real cost ranges.
Your basement is flooding. Here's what to do right now: Turn off electricity to the basement at your breaker panel before entering. Don't touch standing water if power is on. Call your insurance company within 24 hours. Remove valuables and start documenting with photos immediately. If water is rising fast, sewage is present, or water is near electrical panels, call a professional restoration company.
Step 1: Electrical Safety First (0-5 Minutes)
Water and electricity are a fatal combination. Before you step into that water:
Go to your main electrical panel
Flip the breaker for the basement to OFF
If the panel is in the flooded area, call your utility company to cut power from outside
Licensed General Contractor, LEED Green Associate, 14+ years experience
Lisa Nguyen is a licensed general contractor and LEED Green Associate with 14 years of experience managing residential renovation and remodeling projects. She brings expertise in kitchen and bathroom remodels, basement finishing, and sustainable building practices.
If you can't get below 60% humidity within 48 hours, you need professional equipment.
Step 8: Assess What Can Be Saved
Drywall: Bottom 12-18 inches wet = needs to come out
Carpet: Almost always a write-off after flooding
Hardwood: Saveable if dried within 24-48 hours
Laminate: Swells — usually unsalvageable
Electronics: Don't plug in anything submerged. Wait 72+ hours.
What NOT to Do
Don't enter before power is off
Don't use a regular household vacuum
Don't run your HVAC system (spreads contaminated air)
Don't throw things away before documenting
Don't wait to call insurance
Don't paint over wet surfaces
Don't assume it's dry — use a moisture meter
What It Will Cost
Scenario
Cost Range
DIY cleanup (minor, clean water)
$50-$300
Professional extraction only
$500-$1,500
Full restoration (extract + dry + prevent mold)
$2,000-$8,000
Major flood with structural damage
$10,000-$30,000+
Mold remediation (if mold develops)
$1,500-$6,000 additional
Need a certified water damage restoration contractor in Ontario? GetAHomePro connects you with vetted local pros — fast.
FAQ
How long does a flooded basement take to dry?
With professional equipment, 3-5 days for minor floods. Major floods with wet framing: 7-14 days. Never assume dry based on surface feel — use a moisture meter.
Can I stay in my house?
For clean water in a finished basement, usually yes. For sewage backups or major floods, your insurer may cover temporary accommodation.
Will my insurance rates go up?
Possibly. Talk to your broker before filing for minor damage — sometimes paying out-of-pocket is smarter long-term.
How do I prevent basement flooding?
Test sump pump twice yearly, ensure grading slopes away from foundation, keep eavestroughs clear, install battery backup for sump, consider a sewer backup valve.
The first 24 hours determine whether you're looking at a $3,000 cleanup or a $30,000 rebuild. Act fast.