The restoration industry, long dominated by male technicians, is experiencing a significant demographic shift as women enter the field in growing numbers — driven by targeted recruitment efforts and the recognition that restoration requires skills beyond physical labor.
The Restoration Industry Association's 2026 Workforce Survey found that women now represent 18 percent of restoration technicians, up from 9 percent in 2020 and 14 percent in 2023.
The growth is most pronounced in mold remediation and contents restoration, where technical knowledge and customer communication skills are particularly valued.
Women in restoration report that the industry offers genuine meritocracy: advancement is tied to certifications earned and results delivered, not to informal networks or seniority.
Several restoration firms have launched women-in-trades recruitment initiatives, partnering with organizations like Women in Construction and the National Association of Women in Construction (NAWIC).
Actively recruiting from the 50 percent of the population that has historically been underrepresented in the trades represents a significant untapped talent pool — one that the industry is increasingly motivated to access as the technician shortage intensifies.

