iDry Columbus

Water Damage Drying Time Calculator

Water Damage Drying Time Estimator

Tell us what's wet and how it's being dried. We'll estimate how long it should take to reach dry standard — and flag when it's a job for pros.

What got wet?

The situation

Type of water
How long has it been wet?
What's drying it right now?

Your estimate

Not drying on schedule? Don't wait for mold.
iDry Columbus runs metered, documented structural drying across Central Ohio.
Call / Text 614-810-0000

Estimates are general guidance based on typical IICRC S500 drying conditions, not a guarantee. Real drying time depends on temperature, humidity, airflow, material density, and how completely the water source was stopped. Drying is finished when materials return to a dry reference reading — verify with a moisture meter, not the calendar.

How drying time really works

Drying is finished by the meter, not the calendar. A material is "dry" when it returns to its dry reference reading — the same number an identical dry piece in the same building would show. Two walls wet by the same leak can dry days apart depending on airflow, temperature, and how much water actually soaked in.

The 24–48 hour rule. Mold can begin growing on wet organic materials within 24 to 48 hours. That's why the first day matters more than any other: water extracted and air movers running on day one is the difference between drying a wall and replacing it.

Equipment is what makes the estimate real. Professional air movers create the airflow that lifts moisture out of materials, and dehumidifiers pull it from the air so it doesn't just re-absorb. Household box fans move air but don't remove humidity — in a closed room they often stall the dry-down above standard. The estimates above assume proper equipment; without it, plan for far longer and watch for mold.

Category changes everything. Clean water (a supply line, rain) can often be dried in place. Gray and especially black water (sewage, flooding) bring contamination — porous materials are usually removed and disposed rather than dried, and the priority shifts to safe demolition and disinfection.

Drying time — frequently asked questions

How long does water damage take to dry out?
With professional air movers and a dehumidifier running, most clean-water losses reach dry standard in 3 to 5 days. Dense materials take longer — hardwood floors often need 1 to 3 weeks and concrete can take a month. Without proper equipment, drying stalls and mold risk climbs, so the timeline depends far more on airflow and dehumidification than on the calendar.
How long does it take to dry a wet wall?
Surface-wet drywall with proper equipment usually dries in 3 to 5 days. If the cavity behind it and the framing got wet, plan for 5 to 7 days and meter the studs, not just the surface. Walls that sat wet for several days before drying began often need the cavity opened and may require remediation rather than simple drying.
Do I really need a dehumidifier, or will fans work?
Fans alone move air but don't remove moisture from it. In a closed space the humidity rises until evaporation stalls and materials stop drying — sometimes above the level where mold grows. A dehumidifier (or open, dry outdoor air) is what actually pulls the moisture out. For anything beyond a small, quickly-caught spill, you need both airflow and dehumidification.
Can drywall and wood be saved, or do they need replacing?
If drying starts within the first day or two and no mold has set in, drywall and framing can often be dried in place and saved. Once materials have been wet for several days, or mold is present, or the water was contaminated (Cat 2/3), removal becomes more likely. A moisture meter and a look inside the cavity tell the real story.
How do I know when it's actually dry?
Use a moisture meter and compare the wet area to a known-dry reference of the same material in the same building. When the readings match the dry reference and hold steady for a day, it's dry — not before. Our moisture meter reading chart shows the target ranges by material.