Georgia Fire Damage Estimates in Minutes

Use our ready-made Georgia fire damage restoration estimate template to generate accurate, insurance-ready quotes that win more jobs and get approved faster.

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FAQ

What should a Georgia fire damage restoration estimate template include?

A compliant Georgia fire damage estimate should itemize scope-of-work line items such as smoke and soot removal, structural dryout, char demolition, odor mitigation, and content pack-out. It should also reference Georgia's contractor licensing requirements (License No. required for jobs over $2,500), include your IICRC certifications, and align line-item pricing with Xactimate or Symbility codes so adjusters can approve the claim without back-and-forth.

How do Georgia insurance requirements affect fire damage estimate formatting?

Georgia insurers typically require estimates to follow RCV (Replacement Cost Value) and ACV (Actual Cash Value) breakdowns per the Georgia Insurance Code. Your template should clearly separate recoverable depreciation from non-recoverable depreciation, include a signed contractor attestation, and list your Georgia State Licensing Board for Residential and General Contractors license number. Including photos tied to each line item and an IICRC protocol reference can significantly reduce supplement disputes and speed up payment.

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