Cladosporium Mold: Characteristics, Growth Conditions, Health Effects, and Safe Remediation
A widespread mold that favors cool surfaces and recurring moisture.
Cladosporium is one of the most commonly identified molds in indoor air samples.
Unlike molds that require saturated materials, Cladosporium can grow in relatively cool, damp conditions, which is why it often appears seasonally or in specific rooms.
Because it also thrives outdoors, it frequently enters homes through air movement and settles where conditions allow it to persist.
What Cladosporium looks like
Cladosporium typically appears as dark green, brown, or black patches.
Its texture is often powdery or suede-like rather than slimy.
It commonly forms along edges, seams, and textured surfaces rather than spreading evenly.
What Cladosporium needs to grow
Cladosporium prefers cooler temperatures compared to many other indoor molds.
Common growth conditions include:
• Persistent condensation
• Elevated indoor humidity
• Poor air circulation
• Cool surfaces that attract moisture
It is often found on window frames, HVAC vents, bathroom surfaces, basements, and areas near exterior walls.
Common exposure effects
Many people associate Cladosporium with allergy-type reactions.
Sensitivity can increase with prolonged exposure or repeated disturbance.
Commonly reported effects include:
• Sneezing or nasal congestion
• Itchy eyes or throat irritation
• Coughing or respiratory discomfort
• Headaches
• Worsening of asthma symptoms in sensitive individuals
Symptoms are often more noticeable in enclosed or poorly ventilated spaces.
Why Cladosporium often returns
Because Cladosporium is common outdoors, it is constantly being reintroduced indoors.
If condensation or humidity issues remain, growth can reappear even after cleaning.
This can make it feel persistent despite repeated surface treatment.
Cleaning versus remediation considerations
Small amounts of Cladosporium on non-porous surfaces can sometimes be managed with careful damp wiping.
However, porous materials that remain damp may continue to support growth beneath the surface.
Dry cleaning methods can release spores into the air and are generally discouraged.
Safe containment and remediation principles
Long-term control focuses on moisture and condensation management.
Best-practice principles include:
• Reducing indoor humidity levels
• Improving ventilation near windows and exterior walls
• Insulating cold surfaces to reduce condensation
• Removing or replacing materials that stay damp
• Using HEPA filtration during cleaning when needed
Addressing airflow and temperature differences is key to preventing recurrence.
When professional remediation may be appropriate
Professional evaluation is often helpful when:
• Growth repeatedly returns despite cleaning
• Large areas of porous material are affected
• Condensation issues are difficult to control
• Occupants experience ongoing symptoms
Effective remediation typically pairs material removal with humidity and airflow correction.

