Company Group Rates & Custom Class Scheduling Available for 7+ Students
Company Group Rates & Custom Class Scheduling Available for 7+ Students
Yes. Hoarding cleanup can be a profitable specialty service for cleaning, restoration, junk removal, and janitorial companies looking to expand into a growing market.
Students will learn how to classify hoarding situations, perform initial walkthroughs, create estimates, recognize potential hazards, establish safety and PPE protocols, create worksite flow plans, and process salvageable and unsalvageable contents.
Yes. Students receive IICRC Continuing Education Credits (CEC hours) along with proof of training and course completion documentation. This documentation may be presented to insurance companies, property managers, or government agencies as proof of training, competency, or compliance-related documentation.
It can be. Hoarding environments may contain biological hazards, mold, sharp objects, insects, rodents, poor air quality, and structural concerns. We will train you how to address each one.
No. This class is useful for restoration contractors, cleaning companies, junk removal companies, property managers, home inspectors, and environmental service companies.
No. This course focuses on cleanup procedures, safety, documentation, PPE, and real-world field operations.
Sometimes. Certain contamination, water damage, structural damage, or hazardous conditions may qualify for coverage depending on the policy.
No prior hoarding experience is required. Beginners and experienced contractors are both welcome. Students will leave with a better understanding of how to competently address hoarding situations from both a field operations and safety perspective.
This course focuses on real-world hoarding cleanup operations, safety, and field procedures instead of spending hours on psychology and theory.