Discreet Biohazard Cleanup, Handled With Care
When something difficult happens, you shouldn't have to face the cleanup too. We connect families and property owners with trained, discreet local remediation teams — and this work is often covered by insurance.
- Trained, equipped local teams — discretion is standard, including unmarked vehicles
- Homeowner's insurance often covers death and trauma remediation; many teams bill insurers directly
- Help with victim-compensation paperwork where a crime was involved
- Free, private consultation — no obligation, and no details you'd rather not share
Fast response from independent local providers. No obligation.
You Make One Call. Professionals Handle the Rest.
Police, paramedics, and coroners do their work and leave — but they don't clean, and no family member should have to. Biohazard remediation requires trained technicians, proper protective equipment, EPA-registered disinfectants, and lawful disposal of regulated waste. It is precisely the kind of work that exists so you don't have to do it.
We're a referral service: describe your situation in a sentence or two, and we connect you with an independent local remediation team covering your city. They handle everything from there — assessment, insurance verification, the work itself, and documentation — quietly and at whatever pace the situation allows.
The money worry is usually smaller than families fear. Most homeowner's policies cover professional remediation after a death, accident, or crime in the home, and every state runs a victim compensation program that can reimburse crime-related cleanup costs insurance doesn't. Our free tools — an insurance coverage checker and a state-by-state compensation lookup — give honest answers before you speak with anyone.
Services
Biohazard Cleanup
EmergencyProfessional remediation of biohazardous materials by trained, equipped local teams — discreet, thorough, and respectful.
Learn more →Crime Scene Cleanup
EmergencyAfter authorities release the scene, discreet local teams restore the space — with help navigating insurance and state victim-compensation programs.
Learn more →Unattended Death Cleanup
EmergencyCompassionate, discreet remediation after a loved one has passed alone — handled by trained local teams so family doesn't have to go back inside.
Learn more →Blood & Trauma Cleanup
EmergencyDiscreet professional cleanup after accidents and medical emergencies — trained local teams, safe disinfection, insurance-ready documentation.
Learn more →Hoarding Cleanup
Same-weekRespectful, judgment-free hoarding remediation — local teams that work at the pace the situation and family need.
Learn more →Why Families and Property Owners Start Here
Discretion as a standard, not a favor
Unmarked vehicles, plain uniforms, and careful scheduling are industry norms among the teams we route to. Neighbors see an ordinary service visit — nothing more.
Insurance handled with you
Most teams offer to verify your coverage before work begins, document everything to insurer standards, and often bill the insurance company directly. Many families end up paying only their deductible — but confirm coverage against your own policy before authorizing work.
Family-first pacing
Urgent situations get immediate response, but nothing is rushed past you. Teams work from a key handoff if you'd rather not return, preserve belongings and keepsakes you ask for, and walk you through the finished work however you prefer.
Free Tools & Calculators
Get a realistic number or a quick diagnosis before you talk to anyone — free, no sign-up, built on published industry data.
Biohazard Cleanup Cost Estimator
A calm, honest cost range for professional cleanup — and why insurance often means families pay little out of pocket.
Use the free tool →Who Pays for Crime Scene Cleanup? State Victim Compensation Lookup
Every state has a victim compensation program that can reimburse crime scene cleanup. Look up your state's coverage, caps, and where to apply.
Use the free tool →What To Do After an Unattended Death — A Gentle Checklist
A calm, step-by-step guide for the first hours and days — answer three gentle questions and get a checklist for your exact situation.
Use the free tool →Does Insurance Cover Biohazard Cleanup? A 60-Second Answer
Answer two or three simple questions and get an honest read on who pays for cleanup — insurance usually covers more than families expect.
Use the free tool →Hoarding Level Self-Assessment (Levels 1–5)
A private, judgment-free way to estimate where a home falls on the professional 1–5 hoarding scale — five gentle questions, no photos, no login.
Use the free tool →How It Works
- 1
One private conversation
Call or use the short form. A general description and your city are enough — you won't be pressed for details.
- 2
A discreet local team is matched
Your request routes to an independent remediation team covering your area, with urgent situations placed first.
- 3
Assessment and insurance check
The team assesses the scope, verifies your insurance coverage, and gives a written estimate — free and without obligation.
- 4
The work, done quietly and completely
Remediation, lawful disposal, odor treatment, and documentation — finished to professional standards before the team leaves.
Cities We Serve
Local pages with service-area notes, common jobs, and pricing context for each city we cover.
Straight Answers
We connect — we don't perform the work
Biohazard Cleanup Team is a referral service. The independent local remediation teams who contact you carry their own training, equipment, and insurance, and set their own pricing — which you'll always see in writing before work begins.
Discretion you can rely on
Unmarked vehicles and plain uniforms are the norm across this industry, and the teams we route to treat privacy as part of the job. Nothing about the visit announces itself to the neighborhood.
Insurance and compensation, navigated honestly
Most death and trauma remediation is covered by homeowner's insurance, and teams bill insurers directly. Where a crime was involved, state victim-compensation programs can reimburse what insurance doesn't. We also tell you plainly when something usually isn't covered — hoarding cleanup, most often.
Families set the pace
No pressure tactics, no manufactured urgency. Urgent situations get fast response; everything else moves at the pace you and your family choose, including working entirely from a key handoff if you'd rather not go back inside.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are you the cleanup company?
No — we're a referral service that connects families and property owners with independent local remediation teams. The team that contacts you performs the work, sets its own pricing, and provides written estimates directly. Using our service is free and carries no obligation.
Who pays for biohazard cleanup?
Usually insurance. Most homeowner's policies cover professional remediation after a death, accident, or crime in the home, and teams typically bill the insurer directly — many families pay only their deductible. Where a crime was involved, every state also runs a victim compensation program that can reimburse cleanup costs insurance doesn't. Our free coverage checker and state-by-state compensation lookup give honest answers for your situation, including the cases where coverage usually isn't available.
How quickly can someone respond?
Urgent requests are routed first, and most teams offer same-day response for situations that can't wait. That said, nothing here is rushed past what you need — if the scene is still with investigators, or your family needs a day, the team works on your timeline. For active emergencies, calling is faster than the form.
Will anyone know why a crew is at the house?
No. Discretion is a professional standard in this field: teams arrive in unmarked vehicles, wear plain clothing outside the property, and schedule around your preferences. From the street it looks like any home-service visit.
Do we have to be there while the work is done?
No — and many families choose not to be. Teams routinely work from a key or lockbox handoff, photograph and document everything, set aside belongings and keepsakes you ask them to preserve, and walk you through the finished work in person, by phone, or by video. Whatever level of involvement feels right is the right one.
When can cleanup begin after a death that was investigated?
Only after the authorities formally release the scene — the medical examiner's or investigating agency's process comes first, and cleaning earlier can interfere with it. Release usually takes hours to a few days. It's completely reasonable to call before release so a team is ready the moment it happens; they can also help you confirm the scene's status.
Ready when you are.
Call now or send the short form — urgent requests get priority routing.