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Unregulated Trade · No Licence Required

Licences pour Restauration après incendie et fumée au Québec

No specific provincial licence governs fire and smoke restoration in Quebec. IICRC certification is the industry standard, and any reconstruction requires an RBQ-licensed contractor.

Key facts

En un coup d'œil

Faits clés sur les licences pour les restauration après incendie et fumées au Québec

Classification du métier

Unregulated Trade

No Licence Required

Sceau rouge

Non disponible

Permis

Généralement requis

Assurance

Requis ou attendu

The details

Exigences de licence

Reviewing trade credentials and training requirements

What it takes to qualify

Credentials, training, and coverage for this trade

  • No Red Seal endorsement for this trade
  • Liability insurance is required or expected

Fire and smoke restoration does not have a specific provincial licence requirement in Quebec. The industry standard is IICRC (Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification) certification, including Fire and Smoke Restoration and Odor Control credentials, which insurers commonly expect. Mitigation work such as soot cleaning, deodorization, and contents pack-out is unregulated, but any structural reconstruction, electrical, or plumbing repairs performed during restoration must be carried out by contractors holding the appropriate RBQ licence and, for electrical work, a CMEQ member contractor. Workers handling hazardous residues follow CNESST occupational health and safety rules. Most work is coordinated with property insurers.

Organisme de réglementation

IICRC for industry certification standards; RBQ for any reconstruction contractor licensing; CNESST for worker safety

Visiter le site officiel

Comment vérifier

Ask which IICRC certifications the technicians hold, confirm liability insurance, and verify that any reconstruction is done by an RBQ-licensed contractor. This matters most when filing an insurance claim.

Buyer beware

Signaux d'alerte à surveiller

Signaux d'alerte lors de l'embauche d'un restauration après incendie et fumée

No IICRC certification or verifiable fire and smoke restoration experience

Cannot provide proof of liability insurance and WSIB coverage

Pressures you to sign over your insurance claim before assessing the work

Begins cleanup without documenting damage and contents for the insurer

Subcontracts electrical or structural repairs to unlicensed workers

Before you sign

Questions à poser avant d'embaucher

Verify a professional before you hire

A few minutes now saves you later

Posez ces questions avant de signer tout contrat

  • What IICRC certifications do your technicians hold for fire and smoke restoration?
  • Do you carry liability insurance and WSIB coverage, and can you show proof?
  • How do you document damage and work directly with my insurance company?
  • What is your emergency response time for board-up and mitigation?
  • Will licensed trades handle any electrical, plumbing, or structural repairs?

Good to know

Questions fréquemment posées

Les restauration après incendie et fumées au Québec ont-ils besoin d'une licence ?

Fire and smoke restoration does not have a specific provincial licence requirement in Quebec. The industry standard is IICRC (Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification) certification, including Fire and Smoke Restoration and Odor Control credentials, which insurers commonly expect. Mitigation work such as soot cleaning, deodorization, and contents pack-out is unregulated, but any structural reconstruction, electrical, or plumbing repairs performed during restoration must be carried out by contractors holding the appropriate RBQ licence and, for electrical work, a CMEQ member contractor. Workers handling hazardous residues follow CNESST occupational health and safety rules. Most work is coordinated with property insurers.

Comment puis-je vérifier les qualifications d'un restauration après incendie et fumée au Québec ?

Ask which IICRC certifications the technicians hold, confirm liability insurance, and verify that any reconstruction is done by an RBQ-licensed contractor. This matters most when filing an insurance claim.

Quels sont les signaux d'alarme à surveiller au moment d'embaucher un restauration après incendie et fumée ?

(1) No IICRC certification or verifiable fire and smoke restoration experience (2) Cannot provide proof of liability insurance and WSIB coverage (3) Pressures you to sign over your insurance claim before assessing the work (4) Begins cleanup without documenting damage and contents for the insurer (5) Subcontracts electrical or structural repairs to unlicensed workers

Quelles questions devrais-je poser avant d'embaucher un restauration après incendie et fumée ?

(1) What IICRC certifications do your technicians hold for fire and smoke restoration? (2) Do you carry liability insurance and WSIB coverage, and can you show proof? (3) How do you document damage and work directly with my insurance company? (4) What is your emergency response time for board-up and mitigation? (5) Will licensed trades handle any electrical, plumbing, or structural repairs?

Mon restauration après incendie et fumée devrait-il détenir une assurance ?

Oui, les restauration après incendie et fumées au Québec doivent normalement détenir une assurance responsabilité.

Mon entrepreneur restauration après incendie et fumée a-t-il besoin d'une licence de la RBQ ?

Au Québec, la plupart des entrepreneurs qui exécutent des travaux de construction doivent détenir une licence de la RBQ (Régie du bâtiment du Québec). Vous pouvez vérifier la licence de tout entrepreneur dans le Registre des détenteurs de licence en ligne de la RBQ à rbq.gouv.qc.ca. Demandez toujours le numéro de licence et vérifiez-le avant d'embaucher.

Combien coûte un restauration après incendie et fumée au Québec ?

Les tarifs habituels pour les restauration après incendie et fumées au Québec varient de $75-$200/hour (crew and equipment). Extent and type of fire (kitchen, electrical, structural), volume of soot and smoke penetration, water damage from firefighting, contents affected, deodorization method, structural repairs required, and whether the work is coordinated through an insurance claim. Emergency mitigation (board-up, tarping, water extraction) is billed before full restoration. These are indicative ranges; fire-loss costs vary widely with severity and are usually set through an insurance adjuster, so confirm figures with your insurer and a restoration assessment.

Prêt à embaucher un Restauration après incendie et fumée?

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