Maintenance Time

Mould Removal & Treatment

Safe, practical mould treatment with cause-first advice so the problem is less likely to come straight back.

When mould removal is useful

Mould treatment can make a property safer, cleaner and more pleasant — but the reason it appeared still needs to be considered.

Black mould on walls

Common around external walls, ceilings, corners, windows and behind furniture where airflow is poor.

Bathrooms and kitchens

Steam and poor extraction can lead to recurring mould around ceilings, sealant, grout and cold surfaces.

Rental property concerns

Useful where tenants have reported mould and the property needs treatment plus sensible cause-based advice.

Treatment plus diagnosis

Mould comes back when the cause is ignored

It is easy to clean visible mould and make the surface look better for a while. The problem is that mould usually appears because moisture, ventilation, temperature or building defects are helping it grow.

Our approach is to treat the visible mould and explain what is likely to be contributing to it.

Photo Space 1

Insert a mould treatment photo

Good for: visible mould, treatment in progress, PPE, treated wall, or before-and-after mould result.

What we may do

A practical mould treatment visit

The exact process depends on the property and the severity of the mould, but the aim is simple: treat what is visible, reduce risk, and identify the practical changes needed to help stop it returning.

Where suitable, this may include cleaning, biocidal treatment, advice on ventilation, notes on heating or airflow, and recommendations for repairs or extraction improvements.

Important bit

If mould is caused by condensation, leaks or poor ventilation, treatment alone is not a permanent fix. Anyone pretending otherwise is selling fairy dust in a spray bottle.

Photo Space 2

Insert a before photo

Good for: mould in bedroom, window reveal, bathroom ceiling, cold corner or behind furniture.

Photo Space 3

Insert an after photo

Good for: completed treatment, cleaned wall, improved ventilation, fan installation or finished room.

What causes mould to return?

Mould usually returns because the surface keeps getting damp enough for growth to restart.

Poor ventilation

Moist air needs a route out. Weak extract fans, blocked vents and poor airflow can all contribute.

Cold surfaces

Cold walls, corners, ceilings and window reveals can fall below dew point and attract condensation.

Water defects

Leaks, gutter faults, bridging, high ground levels or trapped moisture can keep areas damp.

Need mould removed properly?

Send a brief description of the mould issue and, if possible, a few photos. We’ll help you work out the sensible next step.

Book a Mould Treatment Visit
Book Mould Treatment