What Determines the Cost of Biohazard Cleanup?

No two biohazard scenes are identical, which is why cleanup costs vary so significantly. A certified company will assess several factors before providing an estimate:

Arizona Biohazard Cleanup Cost Ranges by Service Type

The following ranges reflect what Arizona property owners typically pay for certified biohazard cleanup. These are estimates only — your specific situation may fall above or below these ranges based on the factors above.

Service TypeTypical Arizona Cost Range
Suicide or homicide scene cleanup$1,500 – $6,000+
Unattended death / decomposition cleanup$2,000 – $10,000+
Blood cleanup (limited area)$400 – $2,000
Hoarding cleanout (whole home)$1,000 – $20,000+
Rodent biohazard remediation$500 – $3,500
Eviction cleanout$500 – $3,000
Vehicle biohazard cleanup$350 – $2,500
Viral disinfection (whole home)$300 – $1,500
Odor remediation$250 – $2,500
Important note on decomposition scenes: In Arizona's extreme summer heat, unattended death scenes can reach an advanced state of decomposition within 24–48 hours. A scene discovered after several days in summer heat will typically require significantly more extensive remediation — including subfloor treatment, structural assessment, and prolonged odor neutralization — than the same scene discovered within hours.

Why Unattended Death Cleanup Is Often the Most Expensive

Of all biohazard cleanup types, unattended death — where a person is discovered days, weeks, or even months after passing — consistently carries the highest cost. This is due to several factors unique to Arizona's climate:

A professional company uses hydroxyl generators, ozone treatment, enzyme-based neutralizers, and in severe cases thermal fogging to address these conditions. ATP bioluminescence testing confirms complete decontamination before the job is closed.

Does Homeowners Insurance Cover Biohazard Cleanup in Arizona?

In many cases, yes — and this is one of the most important things to understand before paying out of pocket.

Most Arizona homeowners insurance and renters insurance policies include coverage for biohazard remediation following a traumatic event — including suicide, homicide, and unattended death — under the dwelling or personal property damage provisions. The specific coverage depends on your policy, but it is worth checking before assuming you will pay the full cost yourself.

Coverage typically includes:

A certified biohazard cleanup company — like New Light Environmental — provides the documentation required by insurance carriers: ATP test results, scope of work, chain-of-custody for waste disposal, and itemized invoicing. This documentation is essential for a successful claim.

Get a Free Estimate — No Obligation

Our coordinators can give you a preliminary cost range over the phone based on your situation. We also begin the insurance inquiry process on your first call.

Call 602-609-0473

Why You Should Not Attempt DIY Biohazard Cleanup

Attempting to clean a biohazard scene yourself — beyond the obvious emotional difficulty — carries serious legal and health risks that most people are unaware of:

Health risks

Bloodborne pathogens including HIV, Hepatitis B, and Hepatitis C can survive outside a host for hours to weeks under the right conditions. Exposure through skin contact with mucous membranes, cuts, or even inhalation of aerosolized particles during cleaning is a genuine infection risk. Rodent waste carries Hantavirus, which becomes airborne when disturbed and is potentially fatal.

Legal and regulatory risk

Biohazardous waste — including blood, bodily fluids, and related materials — is classified as regulated medical waste under Arizona law and federal OSHA standards. Disposal of biohazardous waste through regular trash or household wastewater is a regulatory violation that can carry significant penalties.

Property damage risk

Improperly handled biohazard scenes can result in ongoing contamination, structural damage, and persistent odors that significantly reduce property value. Surface cleaning that leaves biological material in subfloor, walls, or HVAC effectively locks the contamination into your property.

What You Should Look for in an Arizona Biohazard Cleanup Company

Not all companies advertising biohazard cleanup in Arizona hold the same certifications. Before hiring, verify:

Frequently Asked Questions — Biohazard Cleanup Cost Arizona

How quickly can I get an estimate? +
For most situations, we can provide a preliminary cost range during the first phone call based on your description of the scene. A formal written estimate requires an on-site assessment. We can typically dispatch an estimator to any Phoenix metro location within a few hours of your call.
Will the cleanup cost more if my insurance covers it? +
No. Our pricing is the same regardless of payment method. We do not inflate estimates based on the assumption of insurance payment. Your estimate is based solely on the scope of work required.
What if the cost exceeds my insurance coverage? +
We can discuss payment arrangements for any costs beyond what insurance covers. We work with families in crisis and understand that financial stress compounds an already difficult situation. Talk to us honestly about your situation and we will work with you.
Is there a cost to call and ask questions? +
No. Our dispatch line is free, available 24/7, and answered by a live coordinator. You are never charged for asking questions, getting a preliminary estimate, or understanding what the process involves before committing to anything.
How does the ATP testing work and what does it cost? +
ATP (adenosine triphosphate) bioluminescence testing uses a swab-based sensor that detects biological material at levels invisible to the human eye. The test provides a quantitative result — a number — that confirms whether contamination remains. This testing is included in our biohazard cleanup pricing. There is no separate line item for ATP testing.