20 licensed Las Vegas contractors · Independently reviewed · IICRC certified · Updated March 2026
VegasRebuild
#20 in Las Vegas

1-800 Water Damage — SE Las Vegas & Henderson

National Brand, Local Henderson Owners

★★★★★(44 reviews)

📍 Henderson / SE Las Vegas, NV

📞 Contact via website

🌐 www.1800waterdamage.com/se-vegas-henderson/

30 minutes response · 24/7

Water DamageFire DamageMold RemediationSmoke Damage

✓ Differentiator

National brand accountability with local Henderson owner-operators

Licenses & Credentials

IICRC: verified

Service Areas

HendersonBoulder CityWhitneyParadise

David's Review

David Reyes

By David Reyes · Last researched 2026-03-06 · 1074 words

BELFOR is the largest restoration company in the world. They operate in sixty countries. Their technical resources, equipment inventory, and training infrastructure are at a scale that no independent Las Vegas operator can match. The 1-800 Water Damage brand is their franchise vehicle for the residential and small commercial market, and the Southeast Las Vegas and Henderson location at 8 Sunset Way is operated under that brand with Jason Rader as general manager. On paper, that combination -- global restoration leader, established local team, twenty-plus years as a brand -- should produce a compelling contractor.

The paper story and the review story are different.

In my research, I found a significant discrepancy between platforms. The Google profile shows four point seven stars across forty-four reviews. The Yelp profile, which I consider a more adversarial review environment where unhappy customers are more likely to leave detailed accounts, shows four point three stars across one hundred and forty-four reviews. That is a meaningful difference in both rating and volume. A hundred and forty-four Yelp reviews is a sample size worth taking seriously. The four point three is not a catastrophic number, but the gap between platforms suggests that the Google rating is not capturing the full picture of customer experience.

The billing pattern is what concerns me most. Multiple independent reviewers describe the same sequence: the initial call goes well, the crew arrives, work begins, and then the invoice arrives with charges that were not disclosed before work started. One customer described a bill over eighteen hundred dollars that included a minimum charge they were never told about. Another customer flagged charges for hotel and per diem expenses with a twenty-percent surcharge added -- charges that appeared on the invoice without prior authorization or disclosure. In a consumer context, where the customer is often dealing with a flood or fire at two in the morning and is not in a position to negotiate terms, undisclosed charges are a specific kind of problem. They exploit the urgency of the situation.

The over-scoping complaints are the other consistent thread. Multiple reviewers independently describe being told that more work was necessary than they believed the damage warranted. One customer described a recommendation to remove master bathroom drywall, tile flooring, and dining room ceiling in a water damage scenario where, by their account, water could not physically have reached those areas. The phrase "complete con artists" does not appear in the ATI review or the ServiceMaster EMT review -- it appears in 1-800 Water Damage reviews. That language, from an ordinary homeowner trying to describe their experience, is not a minor data point.

I want to be clear about what I can and cannot know. I was not at these jobs. The contractor's version of events is not represented in review text. But these accounts are specific, independently written, and structurally consistent. The pattern they describe -- undisclosed minimum charges, charges for unrequested services, over-recommendation of scope -- is a documented and recognizable problem in the restoration industry. It is the same category of problem that cost me thirty-four thousand dollars in 2022. I built this directory to help homeowners avoid that outcome.

On insurance handling, 1-800 Water Damage works with carriers and provides documentation. There is no in-house public adjuster. The billing concerns are particularly relevant here: a company that adds undisclosed charges and expands scope beyond what the damage warrants is the structural opposite of what a public adjuster provides. A public adjuster is aligned with the homeowner and has an interest in accurate scope. The billing patterns described in these reviews suggest an alignment in the opposite direction.

ServiceMaster EMT earned its rank-nine position despite a 2.9 Yelp rating because it at least holds large-loss commercial capability. 1-800 Water Damage Henderson lands at rank twenty because the combination of documented billing complaints, over-scoping allegations, and a meaningful Yelp-to-Google rating gap represents the specific risk profile this directory was built to flag.

The BELFOR global backing is real. The brand training is real. The local Henderson team, with Jason Rader, may perform differently than the pattern in the reviews suggests. Before calling, I would specifically ask for a written estimate before any work begins, ask for explicit disclosure of all minimum charges and surcharge structures, and document every verbal commitment in writing. That is the due diligence standard I would apply before any restoration company. For this specific location, based on what the reviews describe, I would apply it with extra care.

The comparison to M&M is direct and not close. M&M integrated model -- transparent scoping, in-house public adjuster aligned with the homeowner, owner-level accountability -- is the structural answer to the specific complaint patterns documented here. If you are calling from Henderson and want a BELFOR-backed national brand, that option exists. If you want the structural protections that prevent the billing and scoping problems these reviews describe, M&M is the call.