Homeowners and adjusters ask for proof. Here are the credentials and coverage standards that apply to ASAP Water Damage Restoration operations.
State licensing & registration
ASAP Water Damage Restoration Today LLC coordinates restoration through licensed Ohio and Indiana entities. License numbers below are verifiable through state registries.
- Ohio contractor license — #RC-1847623 (Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board). Verify at Ohio.gov licensing.
- Indiana contractor registration — #RP18005432 (Indiana Professional Licensing Agency). Verify at IN.gov PLA.
- Ohio public adjuster license — #PA-293847 (claims documentation & carrier coordination).
Field technicians assigned to your project hold current IICRC certifications (WRT, ASD, AMRT, FSRT as applicable). License numbers for the specific entity performing work at your address are also listed on your written scope and invoice.
IICRC certification
Our field protocols align with ANSI/IICRC S500 (water damage restoration) and S520 (mold remediation). Technicians assigned to your project hold current IICRC certifications appropriate to the work performed (e.g., WRT, ASD, AMRT).
Homeowners can verify certification status at the official IICRC registry lookup before work begins.
Insurance coverage (COI)
ASAP and assigned field partners maintain commercial general liability ($2M per occurrence) and workers' compensation coverage appropriate for property restoration. A current certificate of insurance (COI) naming you or your property as certificate holder is available upon request before or during the project — email [email protected].
Carrier coordination
We regularly document losses for major regional carriers including State Farm, Nationwide, Erie, Allstate, Liberty Mutual, Indiana Farm Bureau, and others listed on our service pages. Direct billing is offered when policy terms allow.
Verify before you hire — any contractor
We encourage homeowners to verify credentials regardless of who they hire:
- Ask for IICRC certification cards and license numbers in writing;
- Request a current COI naming you or your property as certificate holder;
- Confirm the business has a verifiable local presence and physical equipment — not just a website.