After a fire, the visible burn is only part of the story. Smoke and soot travel far beyond the flames, settling onto walls and ceilings, working into fabrics and contents, and drifting into the HVAC system and ductwork where it keeps recirculating long after the fire is out. During a smoke damage inspection, a certified inspector walks every accessible area, identifies soot staining and char patterns, assesses affected surfaces and materials, checks the HVAC system for smoke migration, takes moisture readings where water damage paired with the fire, and documents all of it with dated photos.
One thing many assessments miss: the HVAC and ductwork. Smoke pulled through a running air handler can coat the inside of ducts and spread fine residue to rooms that were nowhere near the fire. We make the HVAC pathway a standard part of every smoke damage inspection, because it is one of the most common reasons a home keeps smelling like smoke after the surfaces have been wiped down.
Wildfire smoke damage, even if your home didn't burn
The 2025 Los Angeles wildfires made this clear: a home can survive the flames and still take on significant smoke damage. Wildfire smoke can leave hidden contamination - soot and fine residue settled into walls, insulation, HVAC systems, and contents - in properties that never caught fire. If your home is near a burn area in Malibu, Pacific Palisades, Altadena, Calabasas, or Agoura and still carries a smoke smell, a smoke damage inspection documents what is actually there, room by room.
Documentation built to support your insurance claim
Under California's "all loss by fire" rules, smoke and soot contamination is part of a covered fire loss, and California's 2026 standards (AB 1795) call for formal inspection of smoke damage claims. Our role is the independent assessment: a clear, adjuster-ready report with dated photos, surface and HVAC findings, and plain-language conclusions that a homeowner, a public adjuster, or an insurer can all work from. When a claim calls for laboratory proof of soot and char, that is where smoke damage testing comes in.
Smoke damage inspection vs smoke damage testing
A smoke damage inspection is the visual service: we identify and document what can be seen and assessed on site, for $399. Smoke damage testing adds the laboratory layer - tape-lift samples analyzed for combustion byproducts (ASTM D6602-13), with an optional TEM Soot Confirmation for insurance or litigation cases - for $899. Start with the inspection when you need a thorough visual record and an adjuster-ready report; step up to testing when you need lab-verified soot and char identification.
| |
Smoke Damage Inspection ($399) |
Smoke Damage Testing ($899) |
| Visual walkthrough + soot/char/residue assessment | Yes | Yes |
| HVAC smoke-migration check + photo documentation | Yes | Yes |
| Adjuster-ready written report within 48 hours | Yes | Yes |
| Tape-lift samples sent to the lab (ASTM D6602-13) | No | Yes |
| Lab-verified soot and char identification | No | Yes |
| Best for | A documented visual record + insurance file | Lab-verified proof for disputes or litigation |
Comparing options? See every service side by side on our services page.