Should we treat this mold ourselves or call a professional?« Back to Previous Page

Our bedroom in our Jumeirah villa has had this damp, earthy smell since the heavy rains in February, but I just pulled our heavy wardrobe away from the wall and found a whole patch of black, fuzzy mold behind it, about the size of a dinner plate. My husband thinks we can just wipe it off with bleach, but I'm worried it's a sign of a bigger problem. Is this something we need to get professionally treated immediately, or is a DIY clean-up enough for now?
Posted by Saeed Al-Zahrani
Asked on April 19, 2026 7:15 am
Black mold in a Jumeirah villa after the February rains is a definite red flag, not just a surface issue. The damp, earthy smell and the mold growth behind a wardrobe strongly suggest a moisture problem within the wall itself, likely from water ingress or severe condensation. Simply wiping the visible patch with bleach is a temporary fix that addresses the symptom, not the root cause. The mold's root system (hyphae) will remain inside the porous wall material and regrow.

In Dubai's high humidity, with year-round AC use creating constant temperature differentials, condensation within external walls is a common, hidden driver of mold. The immediate health risks from this type of exposure are typically allergic and respiratory irritation—congestion, sneezing, or worsened asthma. However, prolonged exposure in a sleeping area is a significant concern.

For a patch the size of a dinner plate, a professional inspection is strongly recommended. The critical step is identifying and stopping the moisture source, which could be a hidden leak from the rains or chronic interstitial condensation. A reputable inspector will use a moisture meter to assess the wall's saturation level and can perform air or surface sampling to identify the mold species, which informs the correct remediation protocol.

DIY cleaning with a bleach solution can be attempted for very small, surface-level patches on non-porous materials, but it is ineffective on porous drywall or plaster. If you proceed, ensure the area is well-ventilated, wear an N95 mask and gloves, and scrub with a dedicated mold cleaner. However, without solving the moisture problem, it will almost certainly return. For a confirmed, persistent issue of this scale, professional remediation involving containment, HEPA vacuuming, and antimicrobial treatment is the only way to ensure it is properly resolved and to prevent recurrence.
Posted by Sani Admin
Answered on April 19, 2026 2:17 pm