Fire Damage Restoration Terms and Glossary

The language used in fire damage restoration spans building science, industrial hygiene, insurance practice, and environmental regulation — and misreading a single term can affect claim settlements, scope-of-work agreements, and safety decisions. This glossary defines the core vocabulary used by restoration contractors, insurance adjusters, building inspectors, and environmental professionals across residential and commercial fire loss events in the United States. Entries are organized by category and cross-referenced where applicable to help property owners, adjusters, and contractors operate from a shared vocabulary.


Definition and scope

Fire damage restoration terminology draws from at least 4 distinct professional disciplines: structural engineering, industrial hygiene, insurance adjustment, and environmental remediation. The Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) publishes the primary industry standard — IICRC S700, the Standard for Professional Fire and Smoke Damage Restoration — which establishes baseline definitions and procedural vocabulary. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) contributes structural and safety-related terminology through codes such as NFPA 921 (Guide for Fire and Explosion Investigations) and NFPA 101 (Life Safety Code, 2024 edition).

Insurance-facing terms are further governed by policy language that may align with or diverge from field definitions. Understanding fire damage restoration certifications and licensing is part of understanding what qualified practitioners mean when they use these terms.

Core term categories covered in this glossary:

  1. Damage classification terms (char, pyrolysis, smoke type)
  2. Structural assessment terms (affected, compromised, total loss)
  3. Remediation process terms (abatement, encapsulation, HEPA filtration)
  4. Insurance and claims terms (ACV, RCV, subrogation, scope of loss)
  5. Hazmat and regulatory terms (ACM, friable asbestos, air quality threshold)
  6. Equipment and method terms (hydroxyl generator, thermal fogging, dry-ice blasting)

How it works

The glossary below presents terms alphabetically within each category. Terms marked (IICRC S700) reflect definitions traceable to that standard. Terms marked (NFPA) reflect definitions from named NFPA documents.

Damage classification terms

Structural assessment terms

Remediation process terms

Insurance and claims terms

Hazmat and regulatory terms

Equipment and method terms


Common scenarios

The following 4 scenarios illustrate how terminology applies in practice:

Scenario 1 — Kitchen grease fire: A stovetop fire producing protein smoke residue requires identification of the invisible film on walls and ceilings before standard cleaning methods are applied. Failure to identify protein residue and treat it as dry soot results in odor recurrence. See kitchen fire damage restoration for scope-specific guidance.

Scenario 2 — Wildfire smoke infiltration: A structure not directly burned may sustain IAQ damage from wildfire smoke intrusion. HVAC systems require cleaning per NADCA Standard 05-2021 to remove deposited particulates. See [HVAC cleaning after fire damage](/hvac-cleaning-after

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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