Musty smells
Persistent musty smells near floors, cupboards or corners can point towards dampness in the void below.
Maintenance Time
Practical checks and improvements for suspended timber floors, blocked air bricks, poor cross-flow and damp symptoms below ground.
Subfloor problems are often hidden, but the symptoms can appear inside the property.
Persistent musty smells near floors, cupboards or corners can point towards dampness in the void below.
Moisture and staining near skirting boards or floor edges can be linked to poor underfloor conditions.
Soft boards, decay risk, fungal growth or signs of damp timber need proper investigation rather than guesswork.
Cause-first advice
Poor subfloor ventilation can create damp symptoms that are too easily blamed on “rising damp”.
In many older homes, the real issue may be blocked air bricks, high external ground levels, extensions that cut off cross-flow, debris in the void or trapped moisture below the floor.
Photo Space 1
Good for: airbrick, floor void, damp timber, inspection hatch, moisture reading or blocked ventilation route.
What we may check
Suspended floors usually need cross-flow ventilation. That means air should be able to enter from one side and leave from another, helping keep the void dry.
If air bricks are blocked, covered by raised ground, buried by paths, closed off by extensions or not positioned properly, damp conditions can build up quietly underneath.
A timber floor does not like sitting above a damp, stagnant void. It needs airflow, sensible ground levels and clear ventilation routes.
Photo Space 2
Good for: blocked airbrick, buried vent, missing vent, new vent or external ground level issue.
Photo Space 3
Good for: damp joists, wall plate, debris, standing moisture, humidity reading or cross-flow route.
The solution depends on what is stopping the void from drying properly.
Air bricks can be painted over, buried, blocked by debris, covered by paths or hidden behind raised ground.
Rear extensions, internal walls or poor vent positions can stop air moving properly through the void.
External ground that is too high can bridge ventilation, increase moisture risk and keep walls or floors damp.
Subfloor ventilation is part of the wider damp and airflow picture.
Understand visible damp symptoms before paying for the wrong fix.
View pageAirflow above and below ground both matter in many older properties.
View pageA practical first look when the cause of the issue is not yet clear.
View pageSend a brief description of the issue and, if possible, a few photos. We’ll help you work out whether subfloor ventilation needs investigating.
Book a Subfloor Check