HomeKnowledge HubDamp, mould and aspergillosis › Recognising a damp home

Many high-risk exposures occur before mould is obvious. This page helps you identify early signs and start documenting evidence.

Early warning signs (often missed)

  • Condensation on windows most mornings
  • Cold, clammy walls or cupboards; wardrobes that feel “damp”
  • Persistent musty odour (especially when returning home)
  • Peeling wallpaper, bubbling paint, cracking plaster
  • Recurring black staining on silicone/grout
  • Swollen skirting boards, warped flooring, rusting fittings

High-risk hidden locations

  • Behind wardrobes/sofas on external walls
  • Inside cupboards on outside walls
  • Under sinks, behind washing machines, around toilets/baths
  • Window reveals, behind curtains/blinds
  • Loft hatches and boxed-in pipework

Common causes (useful when speaking to landlords)

  • Water ingress (doors/windows, defective seals, roof, gutters, downpipes)
  • Plumbing leaks (slow leaks behind walls or under floors)
  • Ventilation failures (broken/weak extract fans, blocked vents)
  • Cold bridging and persistent condensation in poorly insulated areas
  • Previous flooding/leaks with inadequate drying

Quick evidence checklist (10 minutes)

  1. Take dated photos of any mould, staining, peeling paint, wet patches.
  2. Photograph likely sources: door thresholds, window seals, gutters if visible, extractor fans, vents.
  3. Write down where the smell is strongest and when it’s worst (after rain, in winter, after showers).
  4. Start a brief symptom note (see Page 3) and keep everything in one folder.
  5. Report the issue in writing to your landlord/agent and keep screenshots/confirmation.

What not to do (for safety)

  • Do not scrape or disturb mouldy plasterboard or insulation yourself.
  • Do not rely on bleach-only cleaning as a “solution” (it may not address underlying moisture or embedded contamination).
  • Do not accept repeated “paint over and close the ticket” approaches without a cause-and-fix plan.
Path: Start » Environment » Housing & Damp » Recognising a damp or mouldy home

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