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Mold Inspection & Remediation in Fort Worth

MoldAct provides IICRC S520-certified mold inspection, testing, and remediation across Fort Worth, TX. We know the local buildings and the mold conditions that come with them.

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Mold remediation built for Fort Worth

Fort Worth sits on the region's characteristic expansive clay soils — locally known as 'black gumbo' — which swell and shrink dramatically with rainfall and drought cycles, cracking slab foundations and pier-and-beam substructures and creating a persistent entry point for groundwater and mold.

The area's humid subtropical climate brings hot, humid summers followed by intense spring storm systems; homes built on slab-on-grade foundations (the dominant construction method across North Texas from the 1950s onward) are especially vulnerable to moisture wicking up through foundation cracks.

Older near-downtown and east-side neighbourhoods have aging cast-iron and clay sewer laterals that are prone to root intrusion and slow leaks, often saturating subfloor and slab-adjacent framing long before a leak is discovered.

Common mold types in Fort Worth

  • Aspergillus/Penicillium (HVAC systems and slab-foundation moisture)
  • Cladosporium (exterior wood trim and ambient outdoor background)
  • Stachybotrys chartarum (chronic slab-crack or plumbing-leak moisture)
  • Chaetomium (water-damaged drywall and subflooring)

We serve Fort Worth Stockyards, Sundance Square, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth Botanic Garden, Texas Christian University and the wider Fort Worth area across ZIP codes 76112, 76102, 76107, 76109, 76244.

Services

Mold Remediation Services in Fort Worth

Tap a service for Fort Worth-specific details.

Certified technician conducting a mold inspection with moisture-mapping equipment inside a home

Mold Inspection

A professional mold inspection identifies the type, extent, and moisture source driving mold growth through visual survey, moisture mapping, and air or surface sampling by a licensed mold assessor — with a written remediation protocol included.

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Technician in full protective suit and respirator removing mold-damaged material during a remediation job

Mold Remediation

IICRC S520-certified mold remediation includes source moisture control, physical containment, HEPA-vacuuming and removal of affected porous materials, antifungal treatment of structural surfaces, and independent clearance testing — never by the same company that performed the remediation.

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Crew in hazmat suits sanitizing a surface affected by black mold growth

Black Mold Removal

Black mold (Stachybotrys chartarum) removal requires a full IICRC S520 Level III protocol — independent assessment, negative-pressure containment, physical removal of all contaminated porous materials, P100 respirator protection, and independent clearance testing. Bleach or encapsulant spray is not remediation.

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Indoor air quality technician collecting a mold air sample with a spore trap device

Mold Testing & Air Quality

Professional mold testing includes paired indoor/outdoor air cassette sampling, surface samples for Stachybotrys and Chaetomium, analysis at an AIHA-accredited laboratory, and a written report with species identification, spore counts, and interpretation — distinguishing elevated indoor levels from normal background.

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Structural drying equipment and air movers set up to dry out a water-damaged room

Water Damage Restoration

Water damage restoration follows the IICRC S500 standard: Category 1/2/3 water classification, immediate extraction, structural drying with dehumidifiers and air movers within 24 hours, daily moisture monitoring, and mold prevention through achieving IICRC drying goals before reconstruction begins.

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Technician performing mold remediation work in a residential basement

Basement Mold Removal

Basement mold removal requires identifying and permanently correcting the moisture source — foundation seepage, sump failure, or condensation — before remediation of affected framing and drywall, followed by encapsulation of the crawl-space or basement slab if chronically damp.

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Extensive mold growth on wooden joists and insulation inside a home's crawl space

Crawl Space Mold Remediation

Crawl space mold is driven by ground moisture vapour and inadequate ventilation — remediation includes IICRC S520 treatment of floor joists and subfloor framing, followed by ground vapour barrier installation and ventilation correction to prevent recurrence.

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Mold growth spreading across attic roof sheathing and rafters

Attic Mold Removal

Attic mold grows on roof sheathing and rafters when inadequate ventilation traps moisture from bathroom exhaust fans, kitchen vents, or ice dam leaks — remediation treats the wood surfaces and corrects the ventilation deficiency or moisture source to prevent recurrence.

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Mold growth along bathroom tile and grout caused by excess moisture and poor ventilation

Bathroom Mold Removal

Bathroom mold may be surface growth (Cladosporium on grout or caulk, treatable with professional cleaning) or structural (mold behind drywall or subfloor from chronic moisture), which requires IICRC S520 protocol remediation — a professional assessment determines which applies.

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Mold buildup inside an aged HVAC unit's ductwork and components

HVAC Mold Cleaning

HVAC mold requires specialist remediation — not routine duct cleaning — including assessment and treatment of the air handler coil and drain pan, duct interior surfaces, and post-remediation air sampling to confirm clearance before the system is operated again.

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Common moisture and mold conditions found in an unencapsulated crawl space

Crawl Space Encapsulation

Crawl space encapsulation installs a reinforced 20-mil polyethylene vapour barrier over the floor and lower walls, sealed at all seams and foundation penetrations, to permanently control ground moisture and prevent future mold growth — the definitive solution for chronically damp crawl spaces.

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Mold remediation crew completing final work ahead of post-remediation clearance testing

Post-Remediation Clearance Testing

Post-remediation clearance testing must be performed by an independent licensed mold assessor — not the remediator — with air samples collected while containment is still in place, an outdoor control sample taken simultaneously, and results confirming the remediated area has returned to Condition 1 (normal) spore levels before containment is removed.

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Mold Remediation in Fort Worth — FAQs

How soon can you come out in Fort Worth?

Call us and we'll book the earliest available appointment across Fort Worth (76112, 76102, 76107, 76109, 76244), TX. We offer 48-hour response for water damage and active mold emergencies.

What mold types are most common in Fort Worth?

In Fort Worth, the most commonly identified mold types are: Aspergillus/Penicillium (HVAC systems and slab-foundation moisture); Cladosporium (exterior wood trim and ambient outdoor background); Stachybotrys chartarum (chronic slab-crack or plumbing-leak moisture); Chaetomium (water-damaged drywall and subflooring).

Are you licensed and insured?

Yes. MoldAct works exclusively with licensed and insured mold remediation contractors who follow the IICRC S520 standard.

Mold problem in Fort Worth? Call today.

Licensed, insured mold remediation contractors. Call to schedule.

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