Condensation Problems: Causes, Mould Prevention & Ventilation Solutions

Quick Answer: Condensation occurs when warm, moisture-laden air contacts a surface below its dew point temperature. It's the most common form of dampness in UK homes and is primarily a lifestyle and ventilation issue, not a structural one. Solutions involve a combination of mechanical extract ventilation (Part F compliant), background ventilation, improved air movement, and surface temperature improvements. BS 5250:2021 is the primary standard for condensation risk assessment in buildings.

Summary

Condensation is responsible for the vast majority of mould growth in UK dwellings and is frequently misdiagnosed as rising or penetrating damp. Unlike structural damp problems, condensation is driven by occupant behaviour, lifestyle (cooking, bathing, drying clothes indoors), building airtightness, and the thermal performance of surfaces. It can appear suddenly when a building is insulated and draughtproofed without corresponding ventilation improvements.

For tradespeople, understanding condensation is critical for two reasons. First, you may be called to treat black mould on walls when the real cause is inadequate ventilation — applying mould-resistant paint without fixing the ventilation will see the problem return within months. Second, you need to assess condensation risk when installing insulation, particularly in retrofit situations where adding insulation can shift the dew point to within the wall or roof structure, causing interstitial condensation.

Interstitial condensation — moisture condensing within the fabric of the wall rather than on the surface — is the more insidious problem. It's not immediately visible, causes timber decay and insulation degradation, and can take years to manifest as visible damage. A Glaser method or more sophisticated hygrothermal analysis (e.g., WUFI software) should be used to check risk before specifying insulation in walls and roofs.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Moisture Source Approximate Daily Output
Breathing (per person, asleep) 0.3 litres
Breathing/activity (per person, awake) 0.5–1.0 litres
Cooking (3 meals) 1.0–3.0 litres
Bathing/showering 0.2–0.5 litres per bath/shower
Drying clothes indoors 1.5–2.0 litres per load
Gas cooking (combustion) 0.5–1.0 litres
Total (family of 4, typical) 8–15 litres per day

Detailed Guidance

Identifying Condensation vs Other Damp Types

Condensation is typically:

A simple test: place a square of polythene (500mm × 500mm) taped around all edges to the suspected damp wall. Leave for 24–48 hours. If moisture forms on the room-facing side of the polythene, it's condensation. If moisture forms behind the polythene (between it and the wall), the source is within the wall (rising or penetrating damp).

Mechanical Ventilation Solutions

Kitchen extract fans: minimum 30 l/s intermittent (or 13 l/s continuous). Should extract directly outside — not into a roof void. Use a fan with a backdraft shutter. MVHR (mechanical ventilation with heat recovery) is ideal if being installed as part of a retrofit.

Bathroom extract fans: minimum 15 l/s intermittent (or 8 l/s continuous). Run-on timer of minimum 15 minutes after light switch off is good practice (not mandated for existing dwellings but is for new build). Humidistat control is more effective — fans triggered by RH above 70–75% rather than light switch.

Whole-house positive input ventilation (PIV): a single unit in the loft pushes fresh filtered air into the hallway, diluting moist air throughout the house. Effective where trickle ventilation is insufficient but full MVHR isn't justified. Popular for retrofits because no extract ductwork is needed. Brands: Nuaire Drimaster, Envirovent Energysaver.

Continuous mechanical extract: runs at low rate continuously, boosts when sensors detect high humidity. More energy-efficient than intermittent fans. Part F 2022 gives specific design requirements. Brands: Elta, EnviroVent, Vent-Axia.

Background Ventilation (Trickle Vents)

The most commonly absent element in older homes. Trickle vents in windows allow a constant low-level exchange of moist internal air for drier external air without draughts. FENSA-certified window replacements should automatically include trickle vents unless specifically requested otherwise.

Retrofitting trickle vents to existing windows:

Do not permanently seal trickle vents — this is a common cause of condensation in properties where tenants or occupants seal vents for perceived warmth.

Cold Bridges and Internal Insulation

Retrofit internal insulation (when adding dry-lining to solid external walls) requires careful attention to cold bridging at reveals, floor/wall junctions, and ceiling junctions. If the insulation is not returned around reveals, the uninsulated masonry reveal will become the coldest surface in the room — exactly where condensation will concentrate.

Window reveal treatment: return the insulation board around the reveal by at least 200mm (or to within 30mm of the window frame if the depth allows). Use the same PIR board, rebated and taped at joints.

Floor/wall junction: critical cold bridge if the floor slab is in thermal contact with the external leaf. Insulated skirting board or a low-height perimeter insulation detail can address this.

Vapour control layers: when adding insulation to any element, ensure the vapour control layer (where required) is placed on the warm (internal) side and all joints are taped. The most common mistake is lapping polythene or foil VCLs without taping — moisture vapour bypasses at laps.

Mould Remediation

Before treating mould, fix the underlying ventilation problem. Then:

  1. Wear FFP2/P3 mask and nitrile gloves when treating active mould — mould spores are respiratory hazards
  2. Apply fungicidal wash (e.g., Dettol Mould & Mildew Remover, Zinsser Mold Killer) to all affected surfaces; allow dwell time per manufacturer instructions
  3. Wipe down and allow to dry thoroughly — minimum 48 hours with good ventilation
  4. Apply mould-resistant primer (e.g., Zinsser Bulls Eye, Ronseal Anti-Mould Primer)
  5. Apply mould-resistant emulsion (e.g., Dulux Weathershield, Crown Clean Extreme) — these contain biocides that inhibit regrowth

If the plaster or substrate is saturated or structurally compromised by mould/damp, hack off and replace with appropriate plaster (lime-based or renovation plaster).

Repainting over mould without treating the cause first is a waste of money. Ensure the client understands that ventilation habits must also change: extract fans must be used when cooking and bathing, windows opened briefly each morning, and drying clothes outdoors or in a well-ventilated space.

Interstitial Condensation Risk in Retrofits

When insulating existing walls, check the risk of interstitial condensation using the Glaser method (BS 5250:2021 Annex E). The key principle:

The safest approach for internal solid wall insulation: PIR boards against the wall (high Sd, warm side), no ventilation gap, plasterboard taped finish. The high Sd value of PIR limits vapour entry into the cold zone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does mould keep coming back after I've painted it?

Almost always because the ventilation hasn't been improved. Mould-resistant paint inhibits but doesn't prevent regrowth where conditions remain favourable (persistent high surface RH). If the client is not using extract fans, sealing trickle vents, and drying laundry indoors, no amount of paint will solve the problem.

Should I fit a PIV unit or individual extract fans?

Both have their place. Extract fans are more targeted — a bathroom fan directly addresses the highest moisture-producing room. PIV is better for whole-house treatment where multiple rooms have condensation, where occupants are unable to reliably operate individual fans (e.g., elderly or vulnerable tenants), and where installing individual fans is impractical. PIV is not appropriate as a standalone solution in houses with very poor existing ventilation — you still need some background ventilation for it to draw against.

Is black mould a health hazard?

Yes, particularly for vulnerable people. Cladosporium and Aspergillus species produce mycotoxins and spores that exacerbate asthma, cause allergic reactions, and in severe cases cause hypersensitivity pneumonitis. Under the Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS), excess damp and mould is a Category 1 hazard in rental properties — landlords have a legal obligation to address it under the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018.

Does adding more insulation make condensation worse?

It can do if ventilation isn't also addressed. Insulating walls and ceiling without improving ventilation increases the building's airtightness, trapping moisture inside. The warm surfaces of the newly insulated elements reduce surface condensation, but moisture builds up in the air and finds the remaining cold spots. The solution is to insulate AND ventilate.

Regulations & Standards