IICRC Certification — What It Means for Restoration | GetAHomePro
IICRC Certification — What It Means and Why Your Restoration Company Needs It
·3 min read
L
Lisa NguyenGeneral Contractor & Renovation Specialist
Published March 21, 2026
Key Takeaway
What is IICRC certification? Why your restoration company needs it. Covers WRT, FSRT, AMRT certifications, how to verify, and insurance implications.
When disaster strikes — burst pipe, fire, mold — the restoration company you hire makes or breaks recovery. IICRC certification is the single most reliable signal they know what they are doing.
What Is IICRC?
The Institute of Inspection Cleaning and Restoration Certification (founded 1972) is the globally recognized standard-setting body for restoration. They develop technical standards like S500 (water damage) and S520 (mold remediation).
Technicians must complete coursework, pass proctored exams, and fulfill continuing education. 60,000+ technicians certified across North America.
Why It Matters
1. Quality Assurance: Certified techs understand drying science, contamination categories, extraction sequencing. The gap between certified and uncertified routinely determines whether a $12K job is done right or becomes a $40K mold problem later.
2. Insurance: Adjusters prefer IICRC companies. Better documentation, scopes that match industry standards, faster approvals. Some insurer vendor networks require it.
3. Liability: Improper restoration creates new problems. Hiring certified protects your legal position.
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 a company claims certification but doesn''t appear in the registry — red flag.
Insurance and IICRC
IICRC-trained technicians produce what adjusters need: daily moisture readings, drying logs, equipment diagrams, final readings. Major estimating software (Xactimate) prices based on certified work. Uncertified companies using the same billing codes get flagged.
Red Flags (NOT Certified)
No moisture documentation
No mention of drying standards or S500
Pressure to skip insurance process
Vague scopes ("remove and replace wet materials" is not a scope)
No containment for mold work
40%+ below competitor bids
Certified vs Uncertified Cost
Factor
Certified
Uncertified
Initial cost
10-20% higher
Lower upfront
Insurance approval
Faster
Slower, more disputes
Rework needed
Rare
Common
Mold risk after water
Low
Higher
Documentation
Comprehensive
Often incomplete
Long-term outcome
Fixed once
May need second remediation
A $15K certified job done right is cheaper than a $12K uncertified job + $30K mold remediation 18 months later.
GetAHomePro lists IICRC-certified restoration contractors across Ontario. Verify credentials before you hire.
FAQ
Can individuals and companies both be certified?
Yes. Technicians earn personal certifications (WRT, FSRT, AMRT). Companies register as IICRC Certified Firms by employing certified staff and agreeing to ethics standards.
Does IICRC certification guarantee good work?
It guarantees training and knowledge of industry standards. Like any credential, it raises the floor — but doesn''t eliminate the need to check reviews and references.
How much does IICRC certification cost the company?
Initial technician certification: $300-$700 per course. Annual firm registration: $200-$500. These costs are reflected in slightly higher pricing — but the quality difference justifies it.
Is IICRC required by law in Ontario?
No. Unlike electrical (ESA) or gas (TSSA) work, restoration is not a regulated trade in Ontario. IICRC is a voluntary industry standard — which makes checking for it even more important, since there is no government licensing to fall back on.
What if my contractor has some certifications but not all?
Acceptable for single-service work. A water-only company needs WRT but not FSRT. A full-service company handling fire, water, and mold should have all three.