Insurance Claim Restoration | Serving Clanton, Chilton County & Central Alabama
Most contractors only do the rebuild. Most public adjusters only file the claim.
Recon Reconstruction documents the damage, works directly with your carrier, and performs the licensed reconstruction from first call to final walkthrough.
Tell Us about your damage
There is a meaningful difference between a contractor who does restoration work and a contractor who manages the insurance claim as part of that work.
A contractor who manages the insurance claim alongside the restoration work does something more valuable.
They assess the full scope of damage before anything is disturbed, using the documentation standards your adjuster requires.
They identify hidden and secondary damage that a surface assessment misses. They communicate directly with your carrier throughout the process — knowing the documentation format, the terminology, and the procedural requirements each carrier uses.
They advocate for a scope of work that reflects the full extent of damage, not just the minimum required to close the claim. And then they perform the licensed reconstruction.
Recon Reconstruction has operated as an insurance restoration contractor in Clanton and Central Alabama for over 27 years.
Owners Kyle McRae and Alex Price have personally managed hundreds of insurance restoration projects — from contained kitchen fires to total loss reconstructions — and know the process from both the construction and the claims side.
Step by Step
Every insurance restoration project we manage follows the same structured eight-step process.
Here is exactly what working with Recon Reconstruction on an insurance claim looks like.
Documentation that accurately captures the full scope of damage — structural, mechanical, cosmetic, hidden, and secondary — produces a settlement that reflects what the rebuild actually costs.
Documentation that only captures what is visible on the surface on the day of the adjuster’s visit produces a settlement that does not.
The difference between these two outcomes is rarely the carrier acting in bad faith. It is usually the scope of documentation submitted.
Adjusters work from what is in front of them. If the documentation does not show hidden framing damage, they do not put it in the scope. If the documentation does not capture smoke damage in adjacent rooms, it does not appear in the settlement.
If the documentation does not note secondary water damage from suppression, it is not covered.
Our documentation process captures the full scope of damage using photographic records, written damage descriptions, and scope line items that meet the standard each carrier uses for claim review.
We have been producing insurance documentation for every major carrier serving the Clanton area for over 27 years.
We know what they need to see and how they need to see it.
Insurance adjusters are professionals doing a job for their employer — the insurance carrier.
Their goal is to assess the damage accurately and settle the claim appropriately within the carrier’s guidelines.
Most adjusters approach that goal honestly. The challenge is that their assessment is necessarily limited to what they can observe during a site visit that may last one to two hours.
When an adjuster’s initial estimate differs significantly from our damage assessment, we do not simply accept the difference and tell the homeowner to absorb it.
We present our documentation, explain the specific items in dispute, and work through the scope until it accurately reflects what the restoration requires. That process is part of our standard service — not an escalation or a conflict.
We have established working relationships with the field adjusters and desk adjusters who handle claims for every major carrier in the Clanton area.
Those relationships are built on a reputation for accurate documentation and professional communication — which makes the process more efficient for everyone involved.
Frequently Asked Questions