AK Restoration Pro

Restoration Contractor Firm — Anchorage, AK

You choose your contractor. The carrier pays the bill.

IICRC certifiedLicensed/bonded Fire & Water Restoration
2026Joined ClaimLink
NewOn ClaimLink
FreeFor homeowners
2Specialties

About AK Restoration Pro

AK Restoration Pro specializes in insurance-related property restoration in the Anchorage area. Unlike general contractors, AK Restoration Pro knows how to document scope for carrier review, submit supplement requests for missed line items, and negotiate reconstruction pricing that reflects the actual cost of restoring your home to pre-loss condition.

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What AK Restoration Pro helps with

  • IICRC certified claims
  • licensed/bonded fire & water restoration claims

How AK Restoration Pro works with homeowners

  1. Emergency response

    Mitigation crew mobilizes quickly — dry, stabilize, and prevent secondary damage.

  2. Scope & estimate

    Detailed estimate prepared in a format the carrier expects (Xactimate).

  3. Build-back

    Repairs scheduled and completed to match pre-loss condition or better.

  4. Final walkthrough

    Sign-off, warranty, and assistance with any supplement items the adjuster approves.

Service area

Service area map — Anchorage, AK
Anchorage, AK
  • Anchorage
  • Anchorage metro area
  • Alaska statewide

Why hire a licensed restoration contractor in Alaska

  • You choose your own contractor

    Preferred-vendor networks work for the carrier, not for you. You have the right to choose any licensed contractor for any covered repair.

  • Carrier-direct billing

    Most emergency mitigation and approved reconstruction bills go direct to the carrier using industry-standard pricing — you handle the deductible, not the whole invoice.

  • Supplements reflect reality

    Carrier scopes often miss items that become obvious only during demo. A good contractor documents and submits supplements for approved additional scope.

What outcomes can look like on claims like yours

Illustrative examples of how common claim types unfold in Alaska — general education, not results of AK Restoration Pro. Actual outcomes depend on policy language, damage, and timing.

Burst supply line and ceiling collapse

Water damage

A common scenario: a supply line fails overnight and part of a ceiling comes down. Initial carrier scopes often cover cosmetic drywall repair and only a fraction of the flooring. Thorough moisture mapping, cabinet-box damage documentation, and code-required electrical work frequently expand the covered scope enough to bring a home back to pre-loss condition.

Post-storm roof denial

Hail damage

Carriers sometimes deny roof replacement after a hail event, calling the damage cosmetic. A fresh inspection with calibrated roof-test squares, shingle mat cross-sections, and NOAA storm-data pairing can establish whether a supportable replacement case exists — and denials do get reversed when the documentation holds up.

Reopened claims and corrected scopes

Reopen & supplement

Initial carrier estimates frequently miss covered line items. Careful scope review, supporting photographs, and code-required documentation are the basis for supplemental payments — the standard path for returning a policyholder closer to whole after an underpaid claim.

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Questions people ask

Do I have to use the contractor my insurance company recommends?

No. You have the right to choose your own licensed contractor for any covered repair. Preferred-vendor networks work for the carrier — not for you.

Do restoration contractors bill insurance directly?

Often, yes. Emergency mitigation is typically billed direct-to-carrier using industry-standard pricing (Xactimate), leaving the policyholder responsible for the deductible and any non-covered upgrades. Confirm billing arrangements with the contractor before work begins.

What if the carrier's estimate doesn't cover the repairs?

Underpayment happens often. Experienced restoration contractors prepare supplement requests — itemized line-by-line documentation showing what the carrier missed — and resubmit for payment. Most supplements get approved when properly documented.

How fast does mitigation need to start?

Quickly. Secondary damage (mold, warping, structural) can start within 48–72 hours of a water loss. The faster mitigation begins, the more of the loss is typically covered.

General information about how restoration contractors work in Alaska — not statements written by AK Restoration Pro.

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