If you are buying a home in Houston, a standard home inspection is not enough. Full stop. Houston’s subtropical humidity, its position in one of the most active flood corridors in the country, and the lasting consequences of Hurricane Harvey have created a resale market where mold risk is real, widespread, and often invisible to the untrained eye. Before you sign a purchase contract, you need a licensed mold assessment – not a visual walkthrough from a general inspector.
Yes – and this answer is not optional if you are buying a home built before 1990, a home that sits in a FEMA-designated flood plain, or a home that last sold in the 18 to 24 months following Hurricane Harvey. The question is not whether mold could be present. In Houston’s climate, airborne spores are a constant. The question is whether mold has colonized the structure of the home you are about to purchase.
Houston averages relative humidity above 75% for large parts of the year. That level of ambient moisture, combined with aging infrastructure and multiple major flood events, creates conditions where mold can establish itself inside wall cavities, under flooring, and in HVAC systems without any visible evidence on the surface. A thorough pre-purchase mold assessment is forensic work. Treat it as due diligence, not an optional upgrade.
This is one of the most important distinctions in Texas real estate: a licensed home inspector is not a licensed mold assessor. These are separate credentials under Texas law. A home inspector is trained to identify visible, accessible defects in structural, electrical, plumbing, and mechanical systems. They are not licensed – and in most cases not equipped – to identify fungal contamination.
In Texas, mold assessors must hold a Mold Assessment License issued by the Texas Department of State Health Services (TDSHS). A licensed assessor can collect air samples, take physical surface samples, interpret lab results, and produce a formal mold assessment report that carries legal weight in a real estate transaction. Home inspectors cannot do this.
A licensed mold assessor will investigate areas a standard inspector typically bypasses:
Mold risk correlates directly with flood history, foundation type, and construction era. Houston’s flood plain maps – maintained by Harris County Flood Control District – are a starting point, but they do not tell the full story. Several neighborhoods carry elevated risk that goes beyond their official flood zone designation.
Meyerland flooded multiple times between 2015 and 2017, with Harvey delivering the worst damage. Many homes were sold after cosmetic repairs – new drywall, fresh paint, refinished floors – without proper structural drying or remediation. Those homes are now appearing on the resale market. Buyers who rely on visual inspection or a standard home inspection are not getting the full picture.
Kingwood and Atascocita, in the Northeast Houston area, experienced catastrophic flooding during Harvey when controlled releases from Lake Conroe sent floodwaters into neighborhoods that had never previously flooded. A significant number of these homes were repaired quickly under insurance timelines that prioritized speed over thoroughness.
Memorial and Spring Branch contain some of Houston’s oldest housing stock, with pier-and-beam foundations and crawlspaces that create a microenvironment suited for mold growth – perpetual shade, limited airflow, and soil moisture directly beneath the floor system. These foundations carry a fundamentally different risk profile than slab-on-grade construction. Slab homes tend to develop mold risk at the perimeter and in wall cavities. Pier-and-beam homes carry risk in the floor system, the subfloor, and any wood framing within three feet of grade.
Any home in a 100-year or 500-year flood plain on the Harris County Flood Map warrants an independent mold assessment before purchase, regardless of what the seller’s disclosure states.
The mold assessment is not just a health and safety tool – it is leverage. A formal mold assessment report from a TDSHS-licensed assessor gives you documented, quantified evidence of a defect in the property. That evidence supports three negotiation strategies:
Do not rely solely on the seller’s disclosure. Texas law requires sellers to disclose known defects, but a seller who conducted cosmetic repairs after Harvey and never commissioned an assessment may genuinely not know the extent of what remains behind the walls. That is not necessarily bad faith – it is the result of incomplete information. Your job as a buyer is to generate complete information before you close.
247 Restoration Specialists provides licensed pre-purchase mold assessments for Houston home buyers. Our assessors are TDSHS-licensed and have worked extensively with post-Harvey remediation – which means we know exactly what to look for in the homes most likely to carry hidden contamination. If you are under contract or approaching an offer in Houston, contact us before you close.
Houston’s subtropical climate — averaging 74% relative humidity year-round — means mold has favorable conditions almost every day. When a water intrusion event happens (a leaking pipe, an AC condensate overflow, a roof leak during storm season), mold can begin colonizing wet drywall and wood within 24 to 48 hours. In Houston, ambient humidity slows natural evaporation, so materials stay wet longer than in drier climates.
Professional mold remediation under IICRC S520 standards includes containment of the affected area, HEPA air filtration, removal of materials that cannot be dried and decontaminated, surface treatment with EPA-registered antimicrobials, and post-remediation clearance testing by an independent licensed assessor. Texas law (Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1958) requires mold assessment and remediation to be performed by separately licensed contractors.
The EPA recommends professional remediation for mold growth larger than 10 square feet. In Houston, where high humidity causes mold to spread rapidly, it’s often better to call sooner rather than waiting to see if the problem grows. Signs that warrant immediate professional evaluation include:
247 Restoration Specialists provides mold remediation across the Houston metro with licensed technicians and direct insurance billing. Call (281) 262-9500 for a same-day assessment.