The Short Answer: Usually Yes
Most standard Arizona homeowners insurance policies provide coverage for biohazard remediation as part of their property damage provisions. This includes cleanup required after suicide, homicide, unattended death, and in some cases accidental death scenes that involve significant biological contamination.
Renters insurance policies often carry similar coverage, though the limits may be lower. Commercial property insurance typically covers biohazard events as well, subject to policy terms.
The key phrase in most policies is "sudden and accidental" loss — meaning the event was unexpected, not the result of ongoing neglect. A traumatic death scene almost always qualifies. A long-standing hoarding situation with gradual biological accumulation may not.
What Biohazard Cleanup Events Are Typically Covered?
While every policy is different, the following scenarios are commonly covered under Arizona homeowners and renters insurance:
- Suicide or self-inflicted death — biological contamination and structural damage resulting from the event
- Homicide or violent crime scenes — including blood, tissue, and odor remediation
- Unattended or undiscovered death — where the property sustained biological contamination
- Accidental death — where the scene involves significant biological material
- In some cases: decomposition odor penetrating structural materials even without visible contamination
What Is Typically Not Covered?
Coverage exclusions vary by insurer and policy, but common exclusions include:
- Hoarding situations where the contamination resulted from gradual accumulation over time (not a sudden event)
- Rodent or pest-related biohazard when it results from a long-standing infestation not promptly reported
- Mold remediation — this is often a separate endorsement
- Cleanup required as a result of illegal activity in some policy language (though many policies cover crime scenes)
- Properties vacant beyond a specified period (typically 30–60 days)
How to File an Insurance Claim for Biohazard Cleanup in Arizona
The process is more straightforward than most people expect. Here is the typical sequence:
- Call your insurance company immediately — even before the cleanup begins, if possible. Early notification preserves your rights under the policy and allows the adjuster to document the scene if needed.
- Get a policy number and claim number — you will provide this to the cleanup company. This allows them to communicate directly with your insurer.
- Call a certified biohazard cleanup company — one experienced in insurance documentation. This is not optional — a company that cannot provide proper documentation will jeopardize your claim.
- Allow the company to assess and document the scene — before cleanup begins, the scope is documented photographically and in writing. This becomes part of your claim file.
- Cleanup is performed — the company completes remediation and conducts ATP testing to confirm clearance.
- Receive your clearance package — the full documentation package is provided to you and your insurer: ATP results, scope of work, before/after photos, chain-of-custody for waste, and itemized invoice.
- Insurance adjuster reviews and pays — with proper documentation, most claims are processed within a few weeks.
What Documentation Does Your Insurance Company Require?
A certified biohazard cleanup company should provide all of the following to support your claim:
Written Scope of Work
A detailed description of the contamination discovered, areas treated, methods used, and materials removed. This is your primary claim document.
ATP Bioluminescence Test Results
Third-party lab test results confirming the property was decontaminated to below the threshold for biological hazard. This is the scientific proof your claim is legitimate.
Before & After Photography
Visual documentation of the scene condition before cleanup and after. Insurance adjusters rely heavily on photographic evidence.
Medical Waste Disposal Documentation
Chain-of-custody records showing how biological waste was transported and disposed of through a certified medical waste carrier — required by OSHA and your insurer.
Itemized Invoice
Line-item breakdown of all labor, materials, equipment, testing, and disposal fees. This allows adjusters to assess the claim against policy limits.
Company Certifications
Proof that the company holds OSHA, IICRC, or ABRA certifications — some insurers require this to approve payment to a cleanup contractor.
New Light Environmental has extensive experience working with Arizona homeowners and commercial property insurers. We provide all required documentation and can communicate directly with your adjuster.
What If My Insurance Denies the Claim?
Insurance claim denials for biohazard cleanup are relatively uncommon when proper documentation is provided by a certified company. However, denials do occur. If your claim is denied:
- Request the denial in writing with the specific policy language cited
- Review your policy declarations page for "additional coverages" sections — trauma cleanup is sometimes listed separately
- File a formal appeal with your insurer — most denials on documentation grounds can be resolved with additional paperwork
- Contact the Arizona Department of Insurance if you believe the denial is improper — Arizona has a consumer complaint process specifically for insurance disputes
- Consult a public adjuster who specializes in disputed claims