A house fire is one of the most traumatic events a homeowner can face — and the questions that follow are often just as overwhelming as the damage itself. Whether you’re dealing with a kitchen fire in Salt Lake City, smoke damage in Murray, or a larger structure fire anywhere across the Wasatch Front, understanding the restoration process helps you act quickly and protect your family. Below are the most common questions Utah homeowners ask about fire and smoke restoration Utah. How soon should I call a restoration company after a fire? You should call a professional fire and smoke restoration company as soon as the fire department clears the property — ideally within the first few hours. Fire damage is progressive: smoke residue continues to corrode surfaces, soot becomes more deeply embedded with every passing hour, and water used to extinguish the fire begins promoting mold growth within 24–48 hours. The faster a certified restoration team begins mitigation, the less secondary damage your home will sustain and the lower your overall repair costs will be. Utah Disaster Restoration Services offers 24/7 emergency response throughout Salt Lake City, Provo, West Jordan, Murray, and surrounding areas — call us the moment it’s safe to do so. Can smoke damage make you sick? Yes. Smoke and soot contain a complex mixture of toxic chemicals, including carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, benzene, and heavy metals — all of which can cause serious health problems when inhaled or absorbed through the skin. Even after visible flames are out, lingering smoke particles penetrate HVAC systems, wall cavities, and soft goods, meaning your indoor air quality can remain hazardous for weeks without professional remediation. Symptoms like persistent coughing, headaches, eye irritation, and respiratory distress are common in homes with untreated smoke damage. Individuals with asthma, heart conditions, or compromised immune systems face heightened risk. Professional air scrubbing, HEPA filtration, and structural deodorization are essential before a property is safe to re-occupy. What does fire and smoke restoration include? A complete fire and smoke restoration project typically involves several stages. First, the team secures the structure with emergency board-up and tarping to prevent further weather or security exposure. Next comes water extraction and drying if fire hoses were used. Technicians then remove unsalvageable materials, clean soot and smoke residue from all surfaces using specialized chemicals and techniques, and deodorize the structure using hydroxyl generators or thermal fogging. Contents cleaning and pack-out services protect your belongings while structural repairs are completed. Finally, rebuilding and reconstruction return your home to pre-loss condition. Utah Disaster Restoration Services handles every phase in-house — you won’t be coordinating multiple contractors. Will my homeowner’s insurance cover fire damage in Utah? In most cases, yes. Standard homeowner’s insurance policies in Utah cover fire damage — including the structure, personal belongings, and often additional living expenses if you need to temporarily relocate. However, coverage limits, deductibles, and specific exclusions vary by policy. It’s critical to document all damage thoroughly before any cleanup begins: take photos and video of every affected area, make a room-by-room inventory of damaged contents, and keep all receipts for emergency expenses. Utah Disaster Restoration Services works directly with all major insurance carriers and can help guide you through the claims process. We provide detailed scope-of-work documentation that supports your claim and helps ensure nothing is overlooked by the adjuster. How long does fire and smoke odor removal take? The timeline depends on the severity of the fire and how deeply smoke has penetrated the structure. A small, contained kitchen fire may require 3–7 days of deodorization treatment. A larger structural fire affecting multiple rooms can take 2–6 weeks to fully remediate, particularly if smoke has infiltrated wall cavities, ductwork, or subfloor materials. Effective odor removal isn’t just about masking the smell — it requires neutralizing the chemical compounds at the source using techniques like ozone treatment, hydroxyl generation, and thermal fogging, combined with thorough surface cleaning. If odor persists after initial treatment, it’s almost always because smoke residue is still present in a hidden area that needs to be addressed structurally. Is it safe to stay in my home after a fire? That depends on the extent of the damage. After any fire, air quality is compromised and structural integrity may be at risk. Even if one room was the primary burn area, smoke and soot travel through HVAC systems and can contaminate areas far from the source. For small, isolated fires — such as a contained appliance fire where the rest of the home is unaffected — you may be able to remain with proper ventilation and air filtration. However, for any fire involving significant structural damage, widespread smoke infiltration, or water damage from suppression efforts, temporary relocation is strongly recommended until professional remediation is complete. Your homeowner’s insurance policy typically covers additional living expenses (ALE) during this period. What is the difference between fire damage and smoke damage restoration? Fire damage refers to the direct destruction caused by flames — charred materials, melted structures, and burned belongings. Smoke damage is often more extensive and harder to remediate: it includes soot deposits, chemical residue, and persistent odors that affect areas the fire never physically reached. In many residential fires in Utah, smoke damage affects 2–3 times more square footage than the actual burn area. Both types require professional remediation, but smoke damage is trickier because it’s not always visible — it hides inside ductwork, inside wall cavities, and in porous materials like insulation and drywall. A thorough restoration company addresses both simultaneously rather than treating them as separate problems. Need Help? Contact Utah Disaster Restoration Services If your home or business has been affected by fire or smoke damage anywhere in Salt Lake City, Provo, West Jordan, Murray, or the surrounding Wasatch Front, Utah Disaster Restoration Services is ready to respond — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Our IICRC-certified technicians handle every phase of fire and smoke restoration Utah from emergency securing to final reconstruction, and we work