ANSI/IICRC S520-2024 · 24/7 Emergency

Mold remediation isn't cleaning. It's source removal under a 60-page standard.

We respond around the clock with AMRT-certified technicians, run every job to the ANSI/IICRC S520-2024 standard, and recommend independent third-party verification on every project that matters.

Standard ANSI/IICRC S520-2024
4th Edition · Professional Mold Remediation
Technician Cert IICRC AMRT
Applied Microbial Remediation Technician
Response Under 60 minutes
Live dispatch · 24 / 7 / 365
$500–$30,000+
Project cost range, driven by contamination Condition more than square footage
3–10 days
Typical project duration, including containment, source removal, drying, and verification
24–48 hrs
Mold colonization window from sustained water exposure above 60% indoor RH
3 Conditions
S520 contamination framework — replaces older square-footage thresholds

What mold remediation actually involves

The colloquial use of “mold removal” covers everything from a homeowner scrubbing shower grout with bleach to a five-figure containment-and-source-removal project under engineered controls. The ANSI/IICRC S520-2024 standard — the consensus “standard of care” that insurance carriers, expert witnesses, and indoor environmental professionals reference — defines what professional mold remediation actually looks like.

The standard’s central principle is straightforward: mold contamination is resolved by physically removing it. Encapsulating mold in place, painting over it, or spraying biocide on porous materials does not meet the standard. Spore-laden materials must come out; surrounding surfaces must be HEPA-cleaned and damp-wiped; the moisture source that caused the contamination must be identified and resolved before work begins; and the area must be verified at completion.

The 2024 edition (the 4th revision of the standard) explicitly de-emphasizes biocide-only approaches that earlier editions allowed under some conditions. It also formalizes Post-Remediation Evaluation and Post-Remediation Verification as separate procedures — the first performed by the remediator as internal quality control, the second by an independent third party.

Below is the framework S520 uses to classify contamination, the ten-step procedural sequence we follow on every project, and the credentials we display because they’re what every property owner should ask any remediator to produce.

The Conditions 1 / 2 / 3 framework

Older guidance — including EPA’s widely cited 2001 document for schools and commercial buildings — divided mold work by square footage. S520 replaces that with a three-state contamination framework. The square-foot benchmarks still appear in DIY contexts (the EPA threshold of roughly ten square feet remains a useful homeowner heuristic), but professional remediation is scoped against Condition rather than area.

Condition Definition Action required
Condition 1
Normal
Indoor fungal ecology comparable to a same-day outdoor reference sample. No visible growth, no abnormal moisture. No remediation. This is the post-remediation target — what verification confirms.
Condition 2
Settled
Settled spores, hyphal fragments, or extracellular microbial components in the indoor environment, originating from a Condition 3 source. HEPA cleaning, damp wiping, often without bulk material removal. Source must be identified and addressed.
Condition 3
Active
Actual mold growth within the indoor environment — visible growth, hidden growth in cavities, or growth confirmed by sampling. Containment, source removal of porous materials, HEPA cleaning of semi-porous and non-porous surfaces, drying, verification.

The 2024 edition added explicit reference to mycotoxins and extracellular microbial components — the chemical residues that remain after spores are killed but before the material containing them is removed. This is one reason the standard pushes back against biocide-only approaches: dead mold is still allergenic and, in the case of Stachybotrys chartarum, still capable of carrying macrocyclic trichothecene mycotoxins.

Why this matters for your project

A bedroom with visible Aspergillus growth on drywall is a Condition 3 project regardless of whether the affected area is six square feet or sixty. The Condition determines the protocol; the area affects duration and cost. Quotes that scope by square footage alone usually under-describe Condition 3 work — and that’s where mid-project change orders come from.

Our remediation process

Every project runs through this ten-step sequence. The order is what the standard requires — skipping or compressing steps is what produces the failed-PRV outcomes that drive insurance disputes and litigation. The full procedural detail is on the mold removal process page.

  1. Inspection & intake

    On-site assessment within sixty minutes of dispatch. Visual review of affected area and surrounding spaces, initial moisture mapping with pin and pinless meters, thermal imaging where conditions warrant.

  2. IEP assessment (where required)

    For Condition 3 projects, insurance claims, real estate transactions, or occupied buildings with vulnerable occupants, an Indoor Environmental Professional performs a full assessment, sampling plan, and scope of work — independent from the remediator.

  3. Containment

    Six-mil polyethylene barriers, ZipWall poles, decontamination chambers for Level 2 and 3 contamination. Negative-air machines establish a pressure differential of roughly five to seven pascals relative to clean spaces.

  4. Source removal

    Porous materials — paper-faced gypsum, fiberglass insulation, ceiling tile, carpet — typically removed past the visible boundary. Semi-porous wood framing cleaned in place by HEPA vacuuming, damp wiping, and abrasive treatment.

  5. HEPA cleaning

    HEPA-filtered vacuums (Pullman-Holt 102ASB, Nikro AS10P) on every surface — horizontal, vertical, and overhead. Damp wiping with surfactant-containing cleaners follows.

  6. Antimicrobial application

    Where appropriate, EPA-registered antimicrobials (Concrobium Mold Control, Benefect Decon 30) applied after physical removal — never as a substitute for it.

  7. Drying to standard

    Low-grain refrigerant dehumidifiers and air movers run until wood framing reaches 12–16% moisture content. Cavity drying via Injectidry where wall systems are involved.

  8. Post-Remediation Evaluation (PRE)

    Internal quality-control review by the remediation contractor. Visual inspection, moisture verification, dust assessment. Confirms the remediator believes the area is Condition 1.

  9. Post-Remediation Verification (PRV)

    Independent third-party verification by an IEP. Visual review plus air and surface sampling as warranted. Pass criteria include indoor spore counts comparable to outdoor reference, no visible growth, no detectable musty odors, and moisture readings below threshold.

  10. Reconstruction & final clearance

    Drywall replacement, painting, baseboards, flooring. Final scope documentation provided in Xactimate format for insurance claim files.

Where we work

National coverage through an AMRT-certified contractor network, with regional dispatch hubs in priority metros. Tampa Bay is our Phase 1 build market; expansion through 2026 into the metros below.

Credentials we display

The remediator’s credentials are the property owner’s first line of due diligence. Anyone you hire — us or someone else — should be able to produce these on request, in writing.

IICRC AMRT
Applied Microbial Remediation Technician — the baseline individual certification under the S520 standard.
IICRC Certified Firm
Firm-level credentialing through IICRC’s Certified Firm program.
S520-2024 Compliance
Every scope of work references the current 4th edition of the standard by edition.
State Licensing
Florida MRSR / MRSA license verification on request. State-specific licensing where applicable.

Common questions

Is mold remediation different from mold removal?

Per the ANSI/IICRC S520-2024 standard, source removal is the work — remediation is the standard governing it. The two terms are commonly used interchangeably in casual conversation, but in technical documentation they describe the same physical process: identifying the moisture source, removing contaminated materials, cleaning surrounding surfaces, drying to standard, and verifying the result. Avoid framing them as alternatives — they aren’t.

What is the difference between Condition 1, 2, and 3?

S520-2024 defines three contamination states. Condition 1 is normal indoor fungal ecology comparable to outdoor reference. Condition 2 is settled spores or microbial fragments in the indoor environment from a Condition 3 source. Condition 3 is actual mold growth in the indoor environment. The action threshold differs by Condition — the framework replaces the older square-footage approach used in earlier guidance.

How long does mold remediation take?

Most projects run 3 to 10 days: 1 to 2 days for containment and source removal, 2 to 5 days for drying, and 1 to 2 days for post-remediation verification. Larger projects with HVAC contamination or whole-home Condition 3 contamination can run 2 to 4 weeks. The drying phase is the most variable component — wet wood framing can take a week or more to reach the 12–16% moisture content target.

What does mold remediation cost?

Typical residential remediation runs from $500 for a single bathroom Condition 2 project to $30,000 or more for whole-home Condition 3 contamination. The single biggest cost driver is the contamination Condition rather than square footage alone. Material types involved, PPE level required, and drying duration are the next-largest variables. See the full cost breakdown →

Will my homeowner’s insurance cover mold remediation?

Conditional. Sudden-and-accidental water events — burst pipes, supply line failures, ice maker line breaks — that produce mold within roughly two weeks are typically covered as continuation of the original loss. Gradual leaks and deferred maintenance are typically excluded. Most policies have a mold sublimit, often $10,000 standard. Florida HO-3 policies are governed by Florida Statute 627.7142. See the full claims guide →

Do I need a mold inspection before remediation?

For any contamination beyond a small surface area, yes. An Indoor Environmental Professional assesses scope, identifies the moisture source, and sets the remediation plan. Inspection costs typically run $250 to $800 for visual and moisture work, $1,200 and up for full assessments with sampling. The remediator should be different from the inspector to enable independent post-remediation verification at the end.

What certifications should a mold remediation company have?

The baseline credential is the IICRC AMRT — Applied Microbial Remediation Technician — for individual technicians. Firm-level credentialing is IICRC Certified Firm. Advanced is AMRS — Applied Microbial Remediation Specialist. State licensing varies. Florida requires both MRSR for remediators and MRSA for assessors, registered separately through the Department of Business and Professional Regulation.

Can mold come back after remediation?

Only if the moisture source isn’t fully resolved. S520 requires moisture source identification before remediation begins — without that, regrowth typically occurs within months. Post-Remediation Verification by an independent IEP confirms the area returned to Condition 1 and validates that the moisture source was addressed. This is the verification step that holds up to insurance scrutiny and that we recommend on every project past the smallest Condition 2 work.

Mold doesn’t wait.
Neither should you.

Twenty-four hour dispatch. AMRT-certified technicians. ANSI/IICRC S520-2024 on every project, in writing.

Call (888) 311-4399
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