Water in the Basement: Cleanup Costs, Causes & Fixes
Cleaning up water in a basement costs $500 to $1,500 for minor seepage and $2,000 to $7,500 for a flooded basement, with finished-basement restoration reaching $10,000 to $25,000. The right fix — and the final bill — depends on why water is getting in: seepage, a failed sump pump, a sewer backup, or a foundation crack.
Water in the Basement: Cleanup Costs, Causes & Fixes — 2026 prices
Cost depends on the source of the water, whether the basement is finished, and how contaminated the water is. Here is what 2026 jobs typically run.
| Basement water job | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Minor seepage cleanup & drying Small amount of clean water, unfinished | $500 – $1,500 |
| Flooded basement cleanup Extraction + drying, moderate volume | $2,000 – $7,500 |
| Sump pump repair or replacement Restore active water removal | $650 – $2,000 |
| Sewer backup in basement Category 3 water, sanitation required | $2,000 – $10,000 |
| Finished basement restoration Drywall, flooring, contents rebuild | $10,000 – $25,000 |
Get an instant cost estimate
Enter the affected area and water type for a scenario-specific range built from real 2026 contractor pricing.
Estimate your restoration cost
$1,400–$3,000
Moderate — single roomEstimate only, based on 2026 U.S. averages. Actual pricing depends on materials, access, region, and the restoration company. Not a quote or insurance determination.
Why water gets into basements
Basements flood from four main sources, and each points to a different fix and price:
- Seepage through foundation walls or floor during heavy rain — often solved with drainage and waterproofing
- Sump pump failure — a $650–$2,000 pump replacement prevents recurring floods
- Sewer or drain backup — contaminated Category 3 water that requires sanitation, and a water-backup insurance endorsement
- Foundation cracks — sealed via injection, then waterproofed to stop returning
Stopping it from happening again
Cleanup restores the space; it does not fix the cause. If water keeps entering, pair restoration with a permanent solution — a sump pump and battery backup, interior or exterior drainage, or foundation waterproofing. That prevention spend is almost always cheaper than repeated cleanups and the mold that follows standing water.
For a finished basement, act fast: carpet, drywall, and framing that stay wet more than 24 to 48 hours often can’t be saved, which is what turns a modest cleanup into a five-figure rebuild.
What to do in the first 24 hours
The faster water is removed, the lower your total cost and mold risk.
Stop the source
Shut off the supply valve or main water line. If water is coming from outside, move belongings up.
Cut the power
If standing water is near outlets or appliances, switch off electricity to that area at the breaker first.
Document it
Photograph and video everything before moving items. This protects your insurance claim.
Call a certified pro
Reach an IICRC-certified restoration company for emergency extraction. Speed lowers cost.
Will insurance cover it?
Sudden, accidental damage — like a burst pipe — is often covered by a standard homeowners policy. Damage from external flooding or slow, long-term leaks is usually excluded unless you carry separate flood insurance or a water-backup endorsement (roughly $50–$250 per year). Coverage varies by policy, so confirm your specific terms before assuming.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to clean up water in a basement?
Does insurance cover a flooded basement?
Why does my basement flood every time it rains?
About this data. Cost ranges reflect 2026 U.S. pricing aggregated from published restoration cost data and industry sources including HomeAdvisor, Angi, and Fixr. The calculator combines per-square-foot rates with water category, exposure time, and selected add-ons to produce a directional estimate. Figures are informational and are not a quote, appraisal, or insurance determination. Last reviewed July 2026.