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ERMI and HERTSMI-Two Mold Tests: How to Interpret the Numbers

I remember staring at the report, trying to decide how bad it was. The numbers felt heavy. High meant danger. Low meant safety. At least, that’s what I assumed.

What no one explained to me at the time is that ERMI and HERTSMI-Two scores don’t function the way most people think they do.

Why These Tests Create So Much Anxiety

ERMI and HERTSMI-Two are often encountered after someone already suspects mold. By the time people run these tests, they’re usually exhausted, symptomatic, and desperate for certainty.

Numbers feel objective. They feel like proof. But without context, they can amplify fear rather than provide clarity.

Why This Is So Often Misunderstood

These tests are frequently treated as diagnostic tools — as if a score alone can determine whether a home is “safe” or “unsafe.”

In reality, ERMI and HERTSMI-Two measure mold DNA in dust. They don’t measure exposure pathways, airflow, duration, or how a specific body is responding.

What I Believed at First

I believed the number would tell me what to do next. That a threshold would automatically dictate urgency, relocation, or remediation.

Instead, I found myself more confused — trying to translate a score into a decision without understanding the bigger picture.

A Pattern I See Repeatedly

This is a pattern I see repeatedly: someone receives a high or borderline score, panics, and feels pressure to make immediate life-altering decisions.

Others receive a lower score and dismiss ongoing symptoms entirely. Both reactions miss what the test is actually showing.

A Single Reframe That Changes Everything

ERMI and HERTSMI-Two describe conditions — not outcomes.

What I No Longer Believe

I no longer believe that a number alone can define safety, risk, or readiness.

What ERMI and HERTSMI-Two Are Actually Measuring

Both tests analyze dust samples to identify and quantify specific mold species. ERMI looks broadly at mold DNA, while HERTSMI-Two focuses on a smaller group associated with water damage.

They provide insight into what has been present in the environment over time — not what you’re breathing in a single moment.

Why Location Still Matters More Than the Score

Results make more sense when paired with an understanding of where mold is likely originating.

Dust can reflect contamination from attics, crawl spaces, or hidden wall cavities — even when living spaces appear visually clean.

How These Tests Fit Into the Testing Landscape

ERMI and HERTSMI-Two can add context when they’re part of a larger understanding — not when they’re treated as final answers.

If you’re earlier in the testing phase, this overview may help ground how different tests fit together:

How to Test for Mold in Your House (And What the Results Mean)

When Numbers Start to Feel Overwhelming

If reviewing a report makes your body tense or your thoughts race, that response makes sense. Numbers can feel like threats when they’re misunderstood.

Pausing to interpret them calmly often leads to better decisions later.

Returning to Orientation

Before making decisions based on a score, it can help to return to the beginning — what you discovered, what you’re experiencing, and what matters first.

I Found Mold in My House — What Should I Do First?

An Anchor Sentence I Wish I’d Had Earlier

Numbers describe environments, not bodies.

A Grounded Next Step

If you have ERMI or HERTSMI-Two results, a gentle next step is asking what conditions they reflect and how those conditions might interact with airflow, moisture, and your own sensitivity.

You don’t have to decide everything from a number. Understanding comes from context, not pressure.

1 thought on “ERMI and HERTSMI-Two Mold Tests: How to Interpret the Numbers”

  1. Pingback: Mycotoxin Testing: What It Can Tell You and What It Can’t - IndoorAirInsight.com

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