Here's how our reports are built, three real findings from a water-mitigation claim, and the ready-to-send contractor follow-ups that come with every one.
This example is a Xactimate estimate, but we audit any invoice or claim package, from Time & Material to photo and daily-log bundles to handwritten field notes.
Real findings from an actual audit, anonymized.
Every report follows the same layout, so your team always knows where to look, and every finding is tied back to the documents in the file.
A snapshot up top: how many variances we identified, what needs clarification, and what checked out clean.
Each billing item is reviewed individually and color-coded by status, so nothing is buried.
Every finding cites the exact files and line items it's based on: invoice, moisture report, sketch, daily logs.
A clear next step and the potential adjustment, written in neutral, defensible language.
A professionally worded request you can paste straight into an email. No rewriting required.
Copy any section or the whole report into your own templates, letterhead, or claim notes.
The executive summary up top, then every finding ranked by potential dollar impact, biggest first, so the largest opportunities are never buried 30 pages in.
Three illustrative catches from this report, in plain English, each one tied back to the specific documents in the file.
An "emergency service call - after business hours" was billed at $407. To earn that premium the response has to clear one of two bars: arrive after business hours, or arrive within four hours of an after-hours call. Lining up the timestamps across the labor invoice and the moisture report, the documentation shows it cleared neither.
It's an easy one to miss. The paperwork did show an 11:02 PM timestamp, so at a glance the after-hours charge looks justified. The catch is that the call came in after hours but the crew didn't actually arrive until office hours the next morning. You only see it if you reconcile the arrival time against that timestamp, not the timestamp alone.
Every finding includes a ready-to-send contractor follow-up. Here's the one generated for this example. Copy it straight into an email to the contractor, no rewriting.
A $407.00 "after-hours emergency service call" was billed, but the documented onsite arrival of 8:10 AM on Wednesday, August 7 falls within standard business hours, and the arrival time is consistent between the invoice and the moisture report. Please provide any documentation supporting the after-hours classification, such as records of after-hours mobilization or a response within the 4-hour window. Absent that, this line item may warrant a $407.00 adjustment.
On paper the equipment all looks right. Every unit is correctly sized. The problem sits one level up. Cross-referencing the moisture report against the property sketch, two open areas had each been billed as two separate drying chambers, and because equipment is priced per chamber, that quietly doubles the air movers and dehumidifiers for those spaces.
Most reviewers stop at chamber sizes and equipment counts, and on its face everything here looks appropriate, so it gets approved. Our AI goes a step further, cross-checking the other documents for justification, and caught the unsupported chamber split right in the sketch. It's a great example of something even trained reviewers routinely miss.
And the ready-to-send follow-up for this one:
The moisture documentation shows two continuous areas each divided into separate drying chambers (Chambers 1 & 2 and 3 & 4), which increases the recommended air mover and dehumidifier counts. Please provide the justification for treating these as separate chambers, or confirm whether a combined-chamber configuration applies. Absent supporting documentation, the equipment quantities for these areas may need to be recalculated on a combined-chamber basis.
Equipment that stays on site long enough qualifies for multi-day rental discounts, which means checking every unit, in every room, against its exact days on site. Reconciling the equipment billing against the days documented in the moisture report, unit after unit had passed the 7- and 14-day thresholds, but the reduced rates were never applied.
Nothing about this one is hard. It's just tedious. Verifying multi-day rental discounts means tracking every piece of equipment across every day in a spreadsheet, and that takes time most teams don't have. We just hand you the answer, plus a ready-to-copy contractor response.
And the follow-up, the tedious part, already written for you:
Several pieces of equipment were on site beyond the 7- and 14-day thresholds that qualify for multi-day rental discounts under the program guidelines, but the discounts don't appear to have been applied: $1,520.00 on air movers and $459.80 on dehumidifiers. Please confirm whether the multi-day rental rates can be applied, for a total adjustment of $1,979.80.
These are three of the dozens of checks in every report, and they all arrive the same way: tied to your documents, written in plain, defensible language, and paired with a follow-up you can send in one click. Your team gets a short list of exactly what to question, and the words to question it with.
We'll send you the complete audit for this claim, every finding line by line, and we're happy to walk you through it live if that's useful.
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Your first audit is free. Send us a claim and get findings like these back in 24 to 48 hours.