Mold in Air Ducts: What It Is, Where It Grows, and What You Can Do About It

Mold in Air Ducts: What It Is, Where It Grows, and What You Can Do About It

Mold in air ducts is a real problem in humid New England homes. Here's where it actually grows, how to confirm it, and what proper remediation involves.

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Mold in Ducts Is Real, but It's Also Misdiagnosed Constantly

There is a lot of confusion about mold in ductwork, some of it generated by companies that have a financial interest in alarming you. So let's be clear about what we're actually talking about before getting into how to handle it.

Mold needs three things to grow: organic material to feed on, moisture, and a surface. Metal ductwork by itself is not a great host for mold — it's not organic. But the layer of dust and debris that coats the inside of ducts over years of use? That is organic. If moisture gets into that layer — from a leak, from a humidifier problem, from condensation on an improperly insulated duct — mold can establish itself and spread.

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Where Mold Actually Shows Up in HVAC Systems

The most common places we find mold during residential inspections in Western Massachusetts are the evaporator coil and the drain pan beneath it, the inside of the air handler cabinet (especially around the coil), and the first few feet of supply ducts near the air handler. Flex duct with small tears or disconnected sections can also accumulate moisture and become a problem area.

Visible mold on the outside of registers or on the ceiling around supply vents is usually a condensation issue — warm humid air hitting a cooler surface — rather than widespread duct contamination. That's worth fixing, but it is a different problem.

How to Actually Confirm It

A flashlight or duct camera inspection at the air handler and accessible duct sections is the most direct method. A musty smell from the vents when the system runs is a common symptom, but it is not conclusive — it could also be dirty coils or accumulated debris without active mold growth. Professional inspection is the most reliable way to know what you're dealing with.

What Remediation Involves

If mold is confirmed, cleaning alone is not always sufficient. The mold source has to be addressed — that usually means fixing the moisture pathway that allowed growth in the first place. Then the affected surfaces are cleaned and treated with an EPA-registered disinfectant appropriate for HVAC use. If the infestation is in flex duct, replacement is often more practical than attempting to clean porous insulation material.

A NADCA-certified contractor will document findings, explain the scope before work begins, and tell you honestly if what they found is minor surface growth or something more serious.

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