From Tulsa's urban neighborhoods and the established suburbs of Broken Arrow, Bixby, Jenks, Glenpool, Owasso, Collinsville, and Sperry throughout Tulsa County, northeast through Rogers County's Claremore, Catoosa, Inola, and Oologah, east into Wagoner County's Coweta and Chouteau, and north into Osage County's Skiatook and Prue, our IICRC-certified technicians understand the distinct restoration challenges facing properties across northeastern Oklahoma's Tulsa metro and surrounding communities. Whether you're dealing with Arkansas River and Verdigris River flooding, tornado damage from Oklahoma's severe spring storm season, ice storm pipe bursts and structural damage, or mold driven by the region's hot and humid summers, we arrive within 45 minutes. We serve homeowners, the energy industry, and businesses throughout the territory, available 24 hours a day, every day of the year.
Arkansas River and Verdigris River flooding throughout the metro, severe spring thunderstorm basement flooding, burst pipes from Oklahoma ice storms, and plumbing failures in Tulsa's older established neighborhoods. 24/7 response.
Learn More →Complete fire and smoke damage restoration across the Tulsa metro — from historic Midtown neighborhoods and Broken Arrow's established communities to the growing residential corridors of Owasso, Bixby, and the Rogers County communities.
Learn More →Oklahoma's hot, humid summers create persistent mold pressure throughout the territory. Certified remediation and moisture source correction across Tulsa, Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties.
Learn More →Emergency sewage cleanup for Tulsa's older municipal infrastructure neighborhoods and the private septic systems throughout rural Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage County communities — 24/7 response across the territory.
Learn More →Rapid restoration for Tulsa's energy industry facilities, Broken Arrow's manufacturing and tech corridor, Claremore's commercial base, and businesses throughout the four-county territory.
Learn More →From tornado damage rebuilds and river flooding restoration throughout the metro to ice storm structural repairs across all four counties — one local Tulsa company, no subcontractors.
Learn More →Certified biohazard and crime scene cleanup serving law enforcement, property managers, and families throughout Tulsa, Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties with full Oklahoma regulatory compliance.
Learn More →EPA-approved disinfection for Tulsa homes, energy industry facilities, healthcare campuses, and commercial properties throughout the four-county territory.
Learn More →Immediate response to Oklahoma tornadoes, ice storms, Arkansas River flooding, and the severe spring and summer thunderstorms that regularly produce damaging hail and wind throughout northeastern Oklahoma.
Learn More →The Arkansas River defines Tulsa's geography and its flood risk. The river flows through the heart of the city, and the communities along its corridor — including neighborhoods in west and south Tulsa, Glenpool, and Bixby — face recurring inundation risk during high-water events driven by upstream rainfall and snowmelt. The Verdigris River, which flows south through Rogers County past Claremore, Catoosa, and into the Arkansas River east of Tulsa, carries its own flooding risk for the communities along its banks. Bird Creek, which drains the northern portions of the metro through Owasso and Collinsville before joining the Caney River, adds a third river flooding corridor to the territory's water damage profile.
Oklahoma's severe thunderstorm season — which runs from March through June and produces some of the most intense precipitation events in the country — drives basement flooding and surface flooding throughout the metro and surrounding communities when storm systems stall over the area and deliver rainfall faster than drainage infrastructure can manage. Ice storms present a distinct and recurring winter water damage risk: Oklahoma sits in the same climatic transition zone as Arkansas, where winter precipitation frequently falls as freezing rain rather than snow. Significant ice accumulations that freeze pipes in exposed locations, collapse tree limbs onto structures, and damage rooflines are a recurring feature of Oklahoma winters. And throughout the territory's extensive older housing stock — particularly in Tulsa's midtown and east side neighborhoods — aging plumbing creates year-round water damage vulnerability. Our team responds 24/7 to all of it.
A fire leaves behind far more than visible damage. Smoke penetrates walls, ductwork, and personal belongings, and soot continues corroding surfaces long after the flames are out. In Oklahoma's winters, fire-damaged properties face rapid secondary damage: a structure breached by fire in January will absorb outdoor cold within hours, and moisture entering through compromised openings can freeze inside structural cavities, extending the damage. In summer, the same humidity that drives Oklahoma's mold risk accelerates deterioration of smoke-damaged surfaces and creates ideal conditions for mold establishment in fire-compromised spaces. Our rapid board-up response addresses both risks immediately after any fire event.
911 Restoration of Tulsa provides full-service fire damage restoration throughout the four-county territory — from the historic neighborhoods of Tulsa's midtown, the Brookside district, and the established communities of the east side through the mid-century and newer construction of Broken Arrow, Owasso, Jenks, and Bixby to the residential properties throughout Rogers County's Claremore, Catoosa, and Inola and the rural communities of Wagoner and Osage Counties.
Mold is a persistent challenge throughout the Tulsa metro and surrounding communities, driven by Oklahoma's humid subtropical climate. Tulsa's summers are long, hot, and humid — the city averages more than 40 inches of rainfall annually, and summer humidity levels remain elevated for months at a time. Any property with moisture management vulnerabilities faces baseline mold growth conditions from late spring through early fall. The territory's significant inventory of older housing stock — particularly in Tulsa's midtown and east side neighborhoods, and throughout the older sections of Broken Arrow and Claremore — includes construction that predate modern vapor barrier and waterproofing standards, and crawl space construction is common throughout the region, particularly in older homes.
Crawl spaces in Oklahoma's climate are chronically challenged by the same warm, humid air that affects the rest of the region. Without active vapor barriers and adequate ventilation, structural framing and subfloor systems in crawl space homes throughout the territory face persistent moisture exposure that drives ongoing mold growth entirely independently of any flood or plumbing event. After any flooding — whether from Arkansas River overflow, severe thunderstorm basement flooding, or a plumbing failure — mold risk in this climate is immediate. Our certified mold remediation specialists correct the moisture source and verify complete remediation.
Raw sewage is a Category 3 biohazard containing bacteria, viruses, and parasites that pose serious health risks to everyone in the affected property. Sewage backup in the Tulsa metro is closely tied to the region's severe thunderstorm season — the same intense rainfall events that cause surface and basement flooding also push the municipal sewer systems of older Tulsa neighborhoods, Broken Arrow, and Claremore toward capacity. When they exceed capacity, sewage-contaminated water backs up through floor drains in homes throughout the territory. Rural communities throughout Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties rely on private septic systems that face failure risk when heavy rainfall saturates soils and prevents drain field function.
In Oklahoma's summer heat, sewage contamination creates a particularly urgent health situation — bacterial growth accelerates significantly at the temperatures the region reaches from May through September. Our team responds 24/7 throughout all four counties.
Tulsa is Oklahoma's second-largest city and one of the most significant energy industry centers in the United States. The city earned its historic reputation as the "Oil Capital of the World," and while that economy has diversified significantly, the energy sector remains a foundational anchor alongside aerospace and defense manufacturing, healthcare, financial services, and a growing technology sector. Broken Arrow, the territory's largest suburban community, hosts one of Oklahoma's most concentrated manufacturing and light industrial corridors. Rogers County's Claremore carries the healthcare, retail, and commercial activity of one of northeastern Oklahoma's most economically active counties, anchored by the Will Rogers Memorial and a growing regional economy.
Every hour of commercial downtime after a property emergency represents real and direct lost revenue across all of these sectors. 911 Restoration of Tulsa provides rapid commercial restoration for all property types throughout the four-county territory.
When damage goes beyond surface-level cleanup, full reconstruction is the path forward. 911 Restoration of Tulsa manages the entire process from initial damage assessment through final finishing work for homes and businesses throughout the four-county territory. We handle all damage types — from tornado damage rebuilds and Arkansas River flood restoration to ice storm structural repairs, fire damage reconstruction, and mold damage remediation requiring framing replacement across Tulsa, Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties.
Our reconstruction team is experienced with the full range of building types found across the territory — the historic brick and craftsman homes of Tulsa's established midtown and east side neighborhoods, mid-century construction throughout Broken Arrow and the established Tulsa suburbs, newer residential and commercial development in Owasso, Bixby, and the growing suburban corridors, and the rural residential construction common throughout Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage County communities.
911 Restoration of Tulsa provides certified biohazard and crime scene cleanup throughout Tulsa, Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties. We work alongside law enforcement agencies, property management companies, and families across Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Owasso, Claremore, Catoosa, Coweta, Skiatook, and all surrounding communities. Every job is handled with complete discretion, genuine compassion, and strict compliance with Oklahoma State Department of Health regulations governing biohazardous waste handling and disposal.
Professional sanitization services for Tulsa homes, businesses, and commercial properties throughout the four-county territory. Our EPA-approved disinfection treatments eliminate viruses, bacteria, and pathogens using hospital-grade products applied with electrostatic technology for complete surface coverage.
Tulsa's healthcare sector — anchored by Saint Francis Health System, Ascension St. John, and the Oklahoma State University Medical Center — creates consistent institutional demand for professionally documented disinfection. Properties that have experienced flooding involving sewage-contaminated water require professional disinfection, not standard cleaning, to verify biohazard contamination has been properly addressed. In Oklahoma's summer heat, that standard becomes more urgent — bacterial growth after contamination events accelerates at the temperatures Tulsa regularly reaches.
Tulsa and northeastern Oklahoma sit squarely in Dixie Alley — the southeastern extension of tornado country that generates some of the most destructive tornado events recorded in the United States. Oklahoma as a whole leads the nation in tornado frequency per square mile, and the Tulsa metro and surrounding counties are fully within the most active zone. Spring severe weather season, which peaks from March through May, brings repeated rounds of supercell thunderstorms capable of significant tornadoes, large hail that strips roofing and siding across entire neighborhoods, and damaging straight-line winds. The communities throughout the territory — from Tulsa's established neighborhoods through Broken Arrow, Owasso, Claremore, Catoosa, and the rural Rogers and Wagoner County communities — have all experienced significant tornado and severe storm damage.
Oklahoma's ice storms are in a class of their own. The state sits at the convergence of Gulf moisture moving north and cold Arctic air moving south, and when those air masses meet over Oklahoma, the result is frequently extended freezing rain rather than snow. Ice accumulations of an inch or more are not uncommon in significant winter events, knocking out power across the metro for days, snapping mature trees, collapsing structures, and freezing pipes throughout the territory. Summer adds flash flooding from intense convective storms and the ongoing Arkansas and Verdigris River flooding risk. Our team responds immediately to all of it, 24 hours a day.
We answer your call any time for properties throughout Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Owasso, Bixby, Jenks, Glenpool, Collinsville, Sperry, Claremore, Catoosa, Inola, Oologah, Coweta, Chouteau, Skiatook, and Prue — nights, weekends, holidays, and during active tornado warnings and ice storm events.
Fast arrival is critical in Oklahoma's climate. Mold risk after water intrusion escalates within 24 to 48 hours in summer. Tornado damage left unsecured compounds quickly through weather infiltration. Ice storm damage that isn't addressed promptly leads to burst pipes and secondary water damage. Speed matters throughout this territory.
Our team understands the specific challenges of this territory — Oklahoma's Dixie Alley tornado profile, the ice storm patterns that recur throughout the winter season, Arkansas and Verdigris River flooding dynamics, the humid subtropical climate that drives year-round mold pressure, and the crawl space construction common throughout the region.
We work directly with your insurance company and handle documentation and billing on your behalf, simplifying the claims process for homeowners and businesses throughout the four-county territory.
One local Tulsa company handles everything from emergency cleanup through complete reconstruction across Tulsa, Rogers, Wagoner, and Osage Counties. No handoffs, no gaps in accountability.
Your neighbors in northeastern Oklahoma — not a national call center. When you call, you reach a local team that knows this community, responds fast, and stays with your project from start to finish.
Our restoration team typically arrives within 45 minutes of your call anywhere in Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Owasso, Claremore, and all surrounding communities throughout the four-county territory. We're available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, including holidays and during active tornado and ice storm events. Call (918) 228-7106 for immediate assistance.
Oklahoma ice storms cause property damage through several mechanisms simultaneously. Freezing rain coats tree limbs until they snap under the weight — and when mature trees fall on roofs and structures, the structural damage can be severe. Ice accumulation on rooflines adds significant weight load that stresses gutters, eaves, and in heavy events can compromise structural systems. When power outages last multiple days — which happens in significant ice storms — homes cool to outdoor temperatures, and pipes in crawl spaces, exterior walls, and unheated mechanical rooms freeze and burst when heat is restored and temperatures rise. Ice melt then enters structures through any opening created during the storm, producing water damage that quickly becomes a mold risk in Oklahoma's climate. If your property experienced an ice storm, call (918) 228-7106 even if the visible damage appears minor.
Yes. We work directly with all major insurance carriers and handle the documentation and billing process on your behalf. Our team thoroughly documents all damage and works with your adjuster directly, minimizing your out-of-pocket costs and stress throughout the claims process.
If it is safe to do so, shut off the water source, move valuables to dry areas, and avoid walking through standing water near electrical outlets or appliances. If you suspect sewage contamination, do not enter the affected area. After tornado or severe wind damage, do not enter any area with compromised structural integrity. Do not attempt mold removal yourself. Our team will handle everything when we arrive.
Yes. We provide free on-site assessments and estimates for all restoration services throughout the territory. Call (918) 228-7106 to schedule your inspection.
We serve Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Bixby, Jenks, Glenpool, Owasso, Collinsville, and Sperry throughout Tulsa County; Claremore, Catoosa, Inola, and Oologah in Rogers County; Coweta and Chouteau in Wagoner County; and Skiatook and Prue in Osage County.
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