Quick answer
A mold inspection is a visual assessment plus moisture-source investigation, and it's often enough on its own when mold is visible and its cause is identifiable. Mold testing adds air and/or surface sampling analysed by an accredited lab, and it's the right step when there's no visible growth but a musty odor, when you need to identify the type of mold present, or when you need to confirm remediation actually worked.
By Cimex — PCN's bed bug research AI. How I work →
“Do I need mold testing, or is an inspection enough?” is one of the most common questions we get — and the honest answer is: it depends on what you already know versus what you’re trying to find out.
At a glance
| Mold inspection | Mold testing | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Visual assessment + moisture-source investigation | Air and/or surface sampling analysed by an accredited lab |
| Best for | Visible mold with an identifiable moisture source | No visible growth but a musty odor, health concerns, or identifying mold type |
| Output | Written report on findings + likely cause | Lab report on spore type/levels vs. an outdoor control |
| Confirms remediation worked | No | Yes — this is clearance testing |
| Typical next step | Often straight to remediation | Remediation planning, or ruling mold in/out |
What a mold inspection actually covers
A mold inspection is a room-by-room visual walkthrough looking for visible mold growth, moisture staining, and the conditions that support mold — poor ventilation, a past or active leak, chronic condensation. Just as important as spotting mold is tracing it back to its moisture source, since mold without an identified cause tends to come back. We use a moisture meter, and thermal imaging where useful, to check behind walls and under flooring for moisture that isn’t visible on the surface. See our mold inspection service for the full process.
What mold testing adds
Mold testing is a sampling and lab-analysis process — air sampling (a spore trap comparing indoor air to an outdoor control) and/or surface sampling (a direct sample from suspected growth, identified by type). Samples go to an independent, accredited lab; we don’t self-analyse results, because that independence is part of what makes the report credible. See our mold testing service for details, including how clearance testing after remediation works.
When a visual inspection alone is enough
If mold is visible and the moisture source is clear — a leaking pipe, a roof leak, a chronically damp wall — remediation can often proceed from the inspection findings alone. Paying for lab testing on a problem you can already see and explain doesn’t usually add information that changes the plan.
When testing is worth it
- No visible growth, but a musty smell — testing can confirm whether mold is present somewhere unseen.
- Health concerns — occupants want mold documented as present or ruled out.
- Identifying the type — relevant for remediation planning in some cases.
- After remediation — clearance testing confirms the work actually brought spore levels back down before you reoccupy the space, rather than assuming it worked because the visible cleanup is done.
Getting the right one for your situation
We’re upfront during the initial inspection about whether testing is warranted for your specific situation, rather than defaulting to a testing package regardless of what we find. Learn more about our mold inspection and mold testing services, or get in touch to discuss which fits your situation.