
Service areas
Water Damage Restoration Service Areas Around San Marcos
We dispatch from our San Marcos hub across Hays, Comal, and Caldwell counties, and we know where the water goes.
Cities and towns we serve

Kyle, TX
Fast-growing north Hays County, where new-build slab homes and busy supply lines see their share of pipe and appliance leaks.
Water damage help in Kyle
Buda, TX
North Hays County along the I-35 corridor, with Onion Creek flood exposure on the area's low-lying streets.
Water damage help in Buda
Wimberley, TX
Blanco River corridor with high flood exposure, hit hard in the 2015 Memorial Day flood.
Water damage help in Wimberley
Martindale, TX
Downstream on the San Marcos River, where river rises reach homes close to the water.
Water damage help in Martindale
New Braunfels, TX
Comal County along the Guadalupe and Comal Rivers, with both river-flood and storm-water risk.
Water damage help in New Braunfels
Local knowledge
We know the rivers, not just the map
Most companies serving San Marcos are national franchises or Austin and San Antonio afterthoughts. We are built around the San Marcos and Blanco River corridor and how flash floods actually behave here.
- Flash Flood Alley and 2015 flood knowledge shapes how we run a job
- We know the low-lying neighborhoods along the water
- Humid Central Texas air feeds mold fast, so we dry and document quickly
Our water damage restoration service areas run out from a San Marcos (78666) hub, reaching roughly 25 miles across Hays, Comal, and Caldwell counties along the I-35 corridor and the river valleys. That radius isn't random. It follows where the water actually goes: the San Marcos River and the Blanco River cut through this region, and when they rise, they flood whole corridors at once. So whether you're on the Blanco in Wimberley, downstream in Martindale, or in a new-build subdivision up in Kyle, find your town below and you'll see we cover it. If you need help right now, call for emergency help in your area.
Where We Provide Water Damage Restoration
Water Damage Restoration San Marcos serves San Marcos and the surrounding Hays County area, including Kyle, Buda, Wimberley, and Martindale, with coverage extending to Maxwell, New Braunfels, Canyon Lake, and Dripping Springs across Comal and Caldwell counties. The river-corridor towns along the San Marcos and Blanco Rivers carry the highest flood exposure.
Think of it as a hub and a radius. One center, one ring. San Marcos is the center because that's where the two rivers meet and where most of the population sits, which is also why the bulk of our calls start right here in town. From there we work outward along two natural lines: the I-35 growth corridor north toward Kyle and Buda, and the river valleys west and downstream. Each direction brings a different kind of water problem, which we get into below. Scroll to find your city, or just call.
Cities We Serve
Five towns have their own page with local detail. Here's the short version of why each one floods the way it does.
Water damage restoration in Kyle deals mostly with newer housing. New homes, new pipes. Kyle has grown fast, and fast-built homes tend to have supply-line and appliance failures more than river flooding, so a lot of Kyle calls are burst lines and water heaters rather than corridor floods.
Water damage restoration in Buda sits in the same north-county growth pattern, but Buda also has Onion Creek running through it. That means a Buda job can be a clean burst pipe one month and creek flooding the next.
Flood and water damage restoration in Wimberley is river work. Pure river work. Wimberley sits right on the Blanco, which carries the highest flood exposure in our whole service area. This is the corridor where the Blanco crested at a record level during the May 2015 Memorial Day flood, and homes along it know exactly what that water can do.
Water damage restoration in Martindale is downstream. The San Marcos River runs through Martindale below the city, so when San Marcos floods, Martindale often gets it next. Riverside homes there need the same flood-cleanup approach as Wimberley, since the water arriving from upstream carries the same silt, the same speed, and the same wreckage into the lower-lying streets.
Water damage restoration in New Braunfels crosses into Comal County, where the Guadalupe and Comal Rivers run. Different rivers entirely. It's a separate watershed with its own flood history, plus the usual mix of storm and pipe damage.
San Marcos & Neighborhoods
The hub itself is the busiest part of our map. San Marcos floods from two directions, river and flash, and different neighborhoods feel it differently.
Blanco Gardens is the name everyone remembers. It was severely flooded in 2015, and homes there sit close enough to the water that flood readiness is just part of life. We mention that with respect, not as a sales angle. Up the hill, newer developments like Blanco Vista, Stonebridge, and La Cima are more likely to see appliance and supply-line failures than river water, simply because of where they're built and how new they are. Higher ground, different problems. Downtown and the historic district mix older housing stock with its own quirks, older plumbing, slab construction, mature trees over roofs. And the Texas State University area carries a heavy concentration of rentals and student housing, which brings a steady stream of appliance leaks and the occasional whole-building event. San Marcos doesn't get a separate page because it's covered here and on the homepage.
Other Areas We Reach
Past the named cities, we reach a wider ring. Maxwell, out on the Hays and Caldwell edge, falls inside our radius. So does Canyon Lake in Comal County and Dripping Springs to the west in Hays County. Still inside the radius. These are mention-only here because the call volume is lighter and the drive is longer, not because we won't come. Conditions on a given day matter too. If you're in one of these areas, or somewhere in between, the honest answer is: call our San Marcos team and we'll tell you straight whether we can reach you and how soon.
Responding Across the Region During Floods
Here's the worry every river-corridor homeowner has, and it's a fair one: will you actually come when the whole town is underwater? River flooding doesn't politely hit one house. It hits a corridor all at once. The Blanco floods Wimberley and pushes downstream into San Marcos, the San Marcos River carries it on to Martindale, and suddenly a dozen streets need help the same morning. A crew built for one town can get swamped fast.
We plan our coverage around exactly that reality. We expect the worst days. During an area-wide event we triage by severity and work the region as fast as conditions and access roads allow. We can't promise everyone a simultaneous knock on the door, and any company that does is selling you something. What we can do is log your address early so you're in the route, then get to you as the situation lets us. Call first. The single best thing you can do is pick up the phone at the very start of an event rather than after the water has had a day to do its damage, because the address logged earliest is the one we reach soonest.
Serving San Marcos & the surrounding Hill Country
San Marcos and a ~25-mile radius across Hays, Comal, and Caldwell counties.
- San Marcos
- Kyle
- Buda
- Wimberley
- Martindale
- Maxwell
- New Braunfels
- Canyon Lake
- Dripping Springs

Who we are
Built on local knowledge and honest documentation
No reviews to lean on yet, so we earn trust the honest way — by being clear about how we work, what it costs, and how we document everything for your insurer.
- Locally based in San Marcos, built around real Flash Flood Alley risk
- We answer 24/7, a real local person on the line
- Documented dry-to-standard process, not eyeball-dry
- We document the loss the way insurers expect and coordinate with your carrier where possible
- Extraction, drying, mold, and rebuild handled by one team
24/7
A real local person answers, day or night
24-48 hrs
The critical window to limit secondary damage
~25 mi
Served from our San Marcos hub across Hays, Comal & Caldwell
S500
The ANSI/IICRC drying standard our process follows
In our service area? Call now, 24/7.
Near the edge and not sure? Call and we will tell you straight.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Straight answers to what San Marcos homeowners ask most — on cost, insurance, mold timelines, and what to do first.

24/7
A real local team across Hays, Comal & Caldwell counties — every job dried to a documented standard.
Have a question on your mind?
Get a quoteWe serve San Marcos and Hays County, including Kyle, Buda, Wimberley, and Martindale, plus Maxwell, New Braunfels, Canyon Lake, and Dripping Springs across the surrounding counties. That's the core list. If your town isn't on it, call and we'll tell you straight whether we can reach you that day or not at all.
Yes. Both sit on the water. Wimberley sits on the Blanco River and Martindale is downstream on the San Marcos River, so both carry high flood exposure. We build our flood damage cleanup work around that corridor risk and serve both towns directly, not as an afterthought to the Austin metro.
We plan our coverage around the reality that river flooding hits whole corridors at the same time. Whole corridors, one storm. We prioritize by severity and reach out across the region as fast as conditions allow, but no honest company guarantees everyone an instant response in a major event. Call early so we can log your address and route to you.
Talk to a local San Marcos team
Tell us straight what is happening and we will tell you the next step. We pick up, then we are on the way.
After you submit, a real local person reviews it and calls you back. If it is an emergency, call, we answer 24/7.