As soon as winter is over, some rooms "retain" moisture: musty odors, stains in corners, peeling wallpaper. The problem is not just aesthetic: beyond certain thresholds of excessive humidity, mold and dust mites multiply more quickly. Here's a simple, room-by-room method to sanitize and, above all, prevent surface condensation without damaging the walls.
Key takeaways
- Check humidity with a hygrometer
- Ventilate for 10 minutes, twice a day
- Clean with white vinegar and baking soda
- Also treat textiles (curtains, carpets, bedding)
- If it persists, dehumidify and check the VMC
Focus: IEQ and comfort after winter. To protect your health and bedding, you need to identify moisture early (stains, odors, humidity), then combine effective ventilation, targeted cleaning, and ventilation adjustment. Now, with the return of cooler days, is when surface condensation is most likely to occur. This approach is aimed at households that see marks on the wall or smell "mustiness".
Reading the signs of a damp room, before it gets worse
The bedroom doesn't always warn with a big, visible problem. Often, it all starts with subtle clues in cold and poorly ventilated areas.
Visual traces and odors: the first signs
After winter, accumulated moisture results in brown, black, or greenish stains in corners and around windows. Wallpaper can peel off, and paint can blister, a sign that water is circulating behind the finish and weakening the substrate. A persistent musty smell is another indicator: it appears when the air is poorly renewed and surfaces remain damp for too long.
What you observe often corresponds to mold whose fungal spores then disperse into the bedroom air. Genera such as Stachybotrys or Aspergillus are regularly cited in housing diagnostics; in all cases, the objective remains the same: reduce the cause (water) and eliminate traces before they reappear.
Humidity: the measurement that determines what to do
Without measurement, we act on feeling. A hygrometer makes the evaluation concrete: beyond 65% humidity, the proliferation of dust mites and mold accelerates significantly. The ideal is between 40% and 60%, which limits the formation of dew point on surfaces.
In winter, each occupant releases between 0.5 and 1 liter of water vapor per night through breathing. If the room remains closed, the air quickly saturates and becomes laden with humidity. This is the basis of surface condensation in the coldest areas.
Intelligent ventilation: renewing the air without cooling the walls
Ventilating, yes, but not just any way. The challenge is to remove indoor humidity while avoiding prolonged cooling of the walls.
Cross-ventilation (draft) to circulate air
The most effective method is to open two opposite windows: this is cross-ventilation. Open them for 5 minutes to quickly renew the air in the room without allowing surfaces to cool deeply.
Over a day, the recommendation remains simple: 10 minutes, twice a day (morning and evening). The goal is not to then overheat or freeze the room, but to address the cause: excess humidity in the indoor air.
Frequency and duration according to the season: avoid permanent tilting
The "window tilted open all the time" rule seems practical, but it continuously cools the walls. Result: surface condensation forms more easily near thermal bridges (junctions, corners, window surrounds).
In practice, keep a simple logic: brief but regular ventilation rather than permanent opening. You reduce the humidity load and limit condensation episodes where surfaces remain coldest.
Sanitizing walls and textiles: lasting cleaning (and bedding protection)
A damp room is not only solved by air. Walls, floors, and textiles retain spores and odors that return if nothing is thoroughly cleaned.
White vinegar and baking soda: treating mold without degradation
To act on spores, pure white vinegar or diluted to 50% can eliminate about 82% of mold spores. For stubborn stains, prepare a paste of baking soda and water, scrub, then rinse thoroughly.
On light walls, 3% hydrogen peroxide also offers an effective alternative. If the musty smell returns, adding 10 to 15 drops of Tea Tree essential oil enhances antifungal action and helps neutralize lingering odors.
Safety note: wear gloves and a mask. Cleaning can release fungal spores into the air, making this protection essential, especially in a small bedroom.
Wash textiles and let the mattress breathe
Textiles absorb what the air carries: spores and odors. Curtains, carpets, and cushions should be washed at high temperatures after winter, or at the hottest program compatible with the fabric. For the mattress, in the morning, leave the bed "open": pull back the sheets so that nighttime moisture can evaporate.
Circulation also matters. Move heavy furniture and wardrobes 5 to 10 cm away from exterior walls. This space reduces invisible moisture pockets behind furniture and improves indoor air quality (IAQ).
When humidity persists: equipment, VMC, and sustainable settings
If traces reappear despite ventilation and cleaning, the humidity may have a technical source or insufficient air renewal. In this case, daily actions must be supplemented by appropriate equipment.
Dehumidify or absorb: choose according to volume
When humidity sets in, an electric dehumidifier can extract between 2 and 30 liters of water per day, depending on the model and the intensity of the problem. For small volumes, humidity absorbers made of rock salt or charcoal remain more economical for daily use.
The goal is to return below 60% humidity. The equipment is not a comfort accessory: it is a tool for reducing humidity, to be used as long as the cause has not been treated.
VMC: check maintenance and performance
In the long term, VMC (Controlled Mechanical Ventilation) maintenance is decisive. Clogged air vents significantly reduce air renewal, which blocks the regular evacuation of humidity.
A double-flow VMC can recover up to 90% of heat while drying the incoming air. In severe cases, work may be necessary: insulation of thermal bridges, injection of resins against rising damp, or treatment of saltpetre when traces appear on low walls.