When water is standing in your Little Rock home, every minute it sits is a minute it's soaking deeper into your floors, walls, and belongings. Emergency water extraction is the first and most important step of any restoration — getting the bulk water out before it wicks into drywall, saturates the subfloor, and starts the mold clock.
Our crews arrive with truck-mounted and portable extractors that pull thousands of gallons far faster than any shop vac or DIY pump. We're on-site across the metro in about 45 minutes, any hour of the day, so the water stops spreading and the drying can begin immediately.
What's included
- Truck-mounted & portable extraction
- Standing water removed from floors & carpet
- Moisture mapping with meters & thermal imaging
- Water category assessment (clean/gray/black)
- Content protection & pack-outs if needed
- Immediate transition to structural drying
- Photo documentation for your claim
- Available 24/7, 365 days a year
Why the first hour matters most
Water follows gravity and capillary action — it doesn't stay where it spilled. Within an hour it's migrating under baseboards, into wall cavities, and down through the subfloor to the joists. The faster we remove the standing water, the less of your structure gets involved and the cheaper and simpler your restoration becomes.
This is why we prioritize speed. A same-hour extraction can be the difference between drying a single room and tearing out an entire floor's worth of drywall and flooring a week later.
How we extract water from a flooded home
We start by identifying and stopping the source if it's still active, then assess the category of water — clean, gray, or black — because that dictates what can be saved. Using powerful extraction units, we remove standing water from hard floors, carpet, and pad, then use weighted extractors to pull moisture out of carpet fibers before drying.
As we extract, we map moisture with meters and thermal imaging so we know exactly how far the water traveled — including the wet spots you can't see behind walls and under cabinets.
Common water emergencies we extract in Little Rock
Burst and frozen pipes during Arkansas cold snaps, failed water heaters and washing-machine hoses, overflowing toilets and tubs, dishwasher and refrigerator line leaks, roof leaks during spring storms, and storm water intrusion into basements and crawlspaces near the river and Fourche Creek.
Whatever the source, the response is the same: get the water out now, then dry it properly so it doesn't come back as mold.