The difference between a claim that settles at full scope and one that requires supplemental filing is not the extent of the damage — it's whether every damage element was documented in the original claim package. Element Restoration Hub closes every job with seven documented elements in the claim package, formatted for direct submission to your ID insurance adjuster. Every element from the day-one scope through dry standard confirmation is assembled, organized, and delivered before the job is marked complete. Call (833) 652-9398 now.
A summary report tells an adjuster what the technician believed was damaged. Seven documented elements tell the adjuster what was measured, when, where, at what level, with what equipment, and whether it was resolved to the applicable IICRC standard. The difference matters because adjusters are trained to look for supporting data behind scope items — and when that data isn't in the documentation package, scope items are flagged for follow-up or reduced pending additional information.
Element Restoration Hub assembles the seven-element package concurrently with the restoration work — documentation is not compiled at the end from memory, but maintained as the work proceeds, so every data point is captured at the moment it is most accurate. The psychrometric log is recorded daily during the drying period, not reconstructed from it. The equipment log reflects actual placement and run-hours, not estimated ones. The damage boundary map is drawn from actual moisture meter readings taken on arrival, not an after-the-fact floor sketch. The result is a seven-element package that reflects the exact conditions at your Soda Springs, ID property throughout the loss event — the type of claim documentation that produces full-scope settlements in ID without supplemental filing.
Many restoration companies produce documentation that the property owner must retrieve and submit. Element Restoration Hub submits the seven-element package directly to your ID adjuster in the format the adjuster needs to process the claim — pre-organized by scope area, with supporting data referenced inline. The submission happens at job close, not weeks later when the adjuster requests it.
The Soda Springs, ID property owner, the ID insurance adjuster, and the property manager (in commercial events) each need the same documentation in different formats. Element Restoration Hub's close package is formatted to serve all three: a plain-language summary for the property owner, an itemized scope with supporting data for the adjuster, and a scope-with-building-systems-impact summary for commercial facility managers.
If additional damage is identified after initial settlement — a structural cavity that wasn't accessible during the first assessment, or delayed biological growth in materials that weren't identified as affected — Element Restoration Hub provides the documentation support for the supplemental claim. The baseline documentation from the original job is already formatted for adjuster use, making supplemental filing more efficient than starting from a fresh inspection.