Don't wait. IICRC-certified pros in Clarksville respond in 44 minutes on average. Every minute of standing water increases damage and mold risk.
Shut off your main water supply
The shutoff is usually at your water meter, under a sink, or in your utility room. This stops the water immediately.
Cut electricity to wet areas
Go to your breaker panel and cut power to any circuit in the affected area. Never wade through water near electrical outlets or panels.
Document everything NOW
Video and photograph all damage before touching anything. Walk through every affected room. This is critical for your insurance claim.
Call us — we dispatch IICRC-certified pros in Clarksville
Our emergency line connects you immediately with certified local teams. Average dispatch time in Clarksville: 44 minutes.
Call your insurance company
Open a claim while waiting for the restoration team. Get a claim number before work begins.
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Clarksville sits at the confluence of the Cumberland and Red Rivers in Montgomery County — one of Tennessee's most flood-prone river systems. The Cumberland River has flooded Clarksville multiple times, and the 2010 Nashville flood event also affected communities throughout the Cumberland basin. Fort Campbell (adjacent in Kentucky) drives massive housing demand in Clarksville. Military family housing — both on-post and the extensive rental market surrounding Fort Campbell — creates maintenance-deferred conditions. Red River and Muddy Fork flooding affects lower-elevation neighborhoods regularly during spring rain events.