Regent Restoration
824 Office Park Cir STE 100 , Lewisville, TX 75057-3180
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fire and Water Damage Restoration, Roofing Contractors, Mold Removal ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
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Typical cost in Dallas
$1,500–$6,000 / project
55 contractors in Dallas
824 Office Park Cir STE 100 , Lewisville, TX 75057-3180
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fire and Water Damage Restoration, Roofing Contractors, Mold Removal ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
151 Cody Austin St , Gun Barrel City, TX 75156-5292
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fire and Water Damage Restoration, Asbestos Removal, Mold Remediation ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
3933 FM 344 E , Tyler, TX 75703-9221
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Asbestos Removal, Mold Removal, Demolition Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
301 S Southeast Loop 323 , Tyler, TX 75702
Fire and Water Damage Restoration, Asbestos Removal, Mold Remediation ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
604 County Road 3062 , Beckville, TX 75631-8623
BBB Accredited A+ rated. Fire and Water Damage Restoration, Construction Services, Remodel Contractors ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
2351 W Northwest Hwy , Dallas, TX 75220
Commercial Contractors, General Contractor, Asbestos Removal ...
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
750 William D Fitch Pkwy Suite 520 , College Station, TX 77845-7494
Environmental Testing, Asbestos Testing, Mold Inspection. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
14050 County Road 411 , Tyler, TX 75706
Ecological Services, Asbestos Testing, Environmental Testing. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
2825 Exchange Blvd STE 103 , Southlake, TX 76092-9152
Asbestos Removal, Mold Removal, Demolition Contractors.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
215 Loch Lomond Dr , Wichita Falls, TX 76302-4314
Asbestos Removal, Cleaning Services, Demolition Contractors. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
Irving, TX 75061-4503
Mold Testing, Asbestos Testing, Mold Inspection. BBB Rating A+.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
1108 Lavaca St Ste 110 , Austin, TX 78701-2110
Mold Inspection, Home Inspections, Fire and Water Damage Restoration.
Serves: 75201, 75202, 75203, 75204 +43 more
For: standard residential abatement in Dallas, TX
Dallas asbestos abatement costs reflect Texas's regulatory framework — the state EPA analog (TCEQ) governs asbestos under federal NESHAP standards, while Dallas County and the City of Dallas have additional notification and disposal protocols. Dallas's large pre-1980 housing stock, particularly in Oak Cliff, East Dallas, Lakewood, and White Rock Lake neighborhoods, means asbestos abatement is a routine part of any major remodel conversation.
| Job Type | Typical Scope | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Asbestos inspection / testing | 2–4 samples to accredited lab | $300 – $600 |
| Popcorn ceiling removal | 1,000–2,000 sq ft | $1,500 – $4,500 |
| Floor tile & mastic abatement | 500–1,500 sq ft | $1,500 – $4,000 |
| Pipe insulation (HVAC / boiler) | 50–200 linear ft | $1,200 – $3,500 |
| Attic insulation removal (vermiculite or blown) | 1,000–2,000 sq ft attic | $2,000 – $6,000 |
| Roofing felt / shingle (friable) | Per 100 sq ft roofing | $500 – $1,500 per 100 sq ft |
| Full whole-home abatement | Multi-material, 2,000+ sq ft | $10,000 – $25,000+ |
Texas has no state asbestos abatement contractor license — but federal NESHAP contractor requirements apply. Price ranges reflect Dallas metro market pricing 2025.
While Texas does not have a separate state asbestos contractor certification (unlike Colorado's CDPHE), federal law applies through the EPA National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP), 40 CFR Part 61 Subpart M. NESHAP requires:
Dallas abatement contractors operate under TCEQ's asbestos program. Notification fees are minimal ($0 for most residential projects under NESHAP), but the procedural requirements add $300–$600 in time and documentation costs to any regulated project.
Dallas's neighborhoods with the highest ACM concentration: Oak Cliff, East Dallas, Lakewood, Lake Highlands, White Rock Lake, Casa View, and Pleasant Grove — most pre-1960 construction. Common ACM locations:
Asbestos waste in Dallas is typically disposed of at the Republic Services North Texas Environmental Services facility or Clean Harbors locations accepting asbestos-containing waste. Transport cost is included in contractor bids, but distance to approved facilities adds to project cost.
Dallas's construction labor market is competitive — abatement workers in Dallas earn $18–$25/hour (per BLS data for the Dallas-Plano-Irving MSA). Full-crew projects (supervisor + 2–3 technicians) bill out at $150–$250/hour for the team. Project mobilization (set-up, polyethylene containment, negative pressure unit) adds a fixed $400–$700 regardless of project size.
Asbestos-related disease — mesothelioma, lung cancer, asbestosis — has a 20–40 year latency period. This means improper asbestos removal in a Dallas home today creates health risk that may not manifest until 2040–2060. In Dallas, where pre-1980 homes are being renovated at scale as the city's aging inner rings gentrify, the risk of inadvertent asbestos exposure during poorly managed renovation is significant.
Texas does not have a standalone state asbestos abatement contractor license equivalent to Colorado's CDPHE. However, federal NESHAP requirements create effective national standards that licensed Dallas abatement contractors must follow:
Federal TSCA Title II (AHERA, 15 U.S.C. §2643) requires that asbestos inspectors and management planners in school and public buildings be EPA-accredited. For residential projects, no federal accreditation requirement exists — but legitimate Dallas abatement contractors voluntarily maintain EPA Model Accreditation Plan (MAP) training for inspectors and abatement workers, demonstrating formal competence.
For demolition and renovation projects subject to NESHAP thresholds, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality must receive advance notification at least 10 working days before work begins. The notification is filed by the contractor, not the homeowner. A contractor who starts regulated asbestos work without TCEQ notification has violated federal-state EPA delegation — a significant red flag.
Verify TCEQ notification status: Ask your Dallas contractor for a copy of the TCEQ notification confirmation before work begins on any regulated project.
For friable asbestos removal, reputable Dallas contractors use a third-party industrial hygienist (IH) for air sampling before, during, and after abatement. The IH provides a clearance air sample report — mandatory for verifying safe re-occupancy after removal. An abatement contractor who claims they can do their own air monitoring has a conflict of interest — independent IH is the industry standard.
Oak Cliff and pre-1940 construction: Dallas's Oak Cliff neighborhood has a high concentration of homes from the 1920s–1940s containing not just floor tiles and popcorn ceilings, but plaster with asbestos aggregate (chrysotile mixed into finish plaster for crack resistance). This is a less common form that some Dallas inspectors miss — an accredited inspector with residential AHERA training will test plaster samples in addition to tiles and ceiling spray.
Renovation cascade: A common Dallas pattern: homeowner renovates a 1960s kitchen, contractor demo's floor tiles without ACM testing, creates asbestos dust exposure for workers and occupants. This is preventable. The EPA recommends testing any pre-1980 floor tile before sanding, chipping, or mechanical removal.
Insurance disclosure: If you sell a Dallas home where asbestos was removed without documented abatement, Texas property disclosure laws (§5.008 Texas Property Code) create liability if the buyer later discovers undisclosed ACM history. Documented, permitted abatement with disposal manifests protects your title.
The short answer: DIY asbestos removal of friable materials is not legally prohibited in Texas for homeowner-occupants, but the federal NESHAP contractor notification requirement, the absence of clearance air testing capability, and the health consequences of improper handling make professional abatement the only sensible choice for regulated materials.
| Factor | DIY (Homeowner) | Licensed Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status — friable ACM | ⚠️ No Texas prohibition for owner-occupant DIY, but NESHAP thresholds still apply | Commercial contractor, NESHAP compliant |
| TCEQ notification | ⚠️ Homeowner can technically file, but rarely done correctly | Filed by contractor 10+ working days in advance |
| Air monitoring / clearance letter | ❌ Cannot obtain accredited clearance sample | Independent IH provides clearance certification |
| Containment requirements | ❌ Negative air machine, 3-layer polyethylene — $500–$800/day in equipment | Contractor-owned equipment |
| PPE | Full-face respirator (P100), Tyvek suits, disposable gloves — $150–$300 total | Contractor-supplied |
| Disposal | ⚠️ Texas MSW facilities accept residential bags with proper labeling — complex process | Licensed transporter, proper waste manifest |
| Resale / title risk | High — undisclosed ACM removal creates disclosure obligation | Documented, clearance-certified |
| Insurance impact | DIY work may void homeowner policy if damage occurs | Certified work is insured and documented |
| Cost "savings" | "Save" $1,000–$3,000 upfront | Pay $1,500–$5,000 for compliance |
| Health risk | Extreme — mesothelioma latency 20–40 years | Managed with full containment |
Federal NESHAP (40 CFR Part 61 Subpart M) establishes thresholds for regulated asbestos activity. Thresholds that trigger notification and contractor requirements:
Below these thresholds: NESHAP does not require advance notification or use of licensed contractors, even for commercial buildings. For residential single-family homes, NESHAP thresholds are higher — but safe work practices (wet methods, proper PPE, sealed containment, licensed disposal) still apply.
Practical implication for Dallas homeowners: A single 9"x9" floor tile below threshold — technically a gray area for DIY. 200 square feet of popcorn ceiling (common scope) — above threshold, contractor required under NESHAP.
Non-friable, minimal quantity, undisturbed: A small section of non-friable asbestos floor tile that is being removed (not sanded or mechanically abraded) may qualify for homeowner handling below NESHAP thresholds. Key conditions:
Encapsulation instead of removal: Dallas HVAC contractors frequently recommend encapsulating intact, non-friable pipe insulation with an asbestos encapsulant paint rather than removing it. NESHAP and TCEQ permit encapsulation for non-friable materials in good condition. Cost: $200–$800 for professional encapsulation vs. $1,200–$3,500 for removal. This is a legitimate, code-compliant option many Dallas homeowners don't know exists.
For a Dallas 1960s home with popcorn ceilings, floor tiles, and pipe wrap — that's likely above NESHAP threshold and requires a licensed contractor. Get a test first ($300–$600) to know what you're dealing with, then make an informed decision. The $2,000–$4,000 cost of professional abatement is title insurance, health insurance, and future buyer protection rolled into one.
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