HomeWhy Broomfield Homes Get Mold
Broomfield, CO · Broomfield County & the north Denver metro

Why Broomfield Homes Get Mold

It's the question we hear most: "It's so dry here — how do I have mold?" Dry outdoor air does not protect the damp pockets inside a Broomfield home. Here's what's really going on.

Local causes · Larimer County specifics · Practical fixes

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Dry air outside, damp pockets inside

Colorado's low outdoor humidity is real, but mold doesn't grow on outdoor averages — it grows wherever water collects indoors. In Broomfield, that means finished basements, slab and foundation leaks, cooler humidity, and winter condensation and snowmelt. Those micro-environments stay wet long enough for mold regardless of what the regional climate looks like.

What makes Broomfield homes especially prone

Local factor 1

Broomfield sits on the Front Range corridor between Denver and Boulder, and much of its housing stock is newer, tightly sealed construction. That's great for energy bills, but it traps humidity from showers, cooking and finished basements indoors instead of letting it escape.

Local factor 2

Master-planned neighborhoods like Anthem and The Broadlands are full of finished basements on irrigated lots. Lawn irrigation and a seasonally high water table push moisture against foundations and into below-grade rooms.

Local factor 3

Front Range hailstorms and spring snowmelt drive water past roof flashing and into window wells. A leak that dries slowly in a closed-up Broomfield basement can start growing mold within a couple of days.

Local factor 4

Evaporative “swamp” coolers, common across the metro, add indoor humidity all summer that condenses in cooler upstairs rooms and closets.

What you can actually do about it

A few habits go a long way in this climate: keep an eye on evaporative-cooler humidity and shut it down on muggy days; make sure finished basements have a working dehumidifier; check slab edges and foundation walls after spring runoff; and dry any leak fully within 24–48 hours. When you find recurring dampness, trace the source rather than just wiping the surface.

Broomfield climate FAQs

If Colorado is so dry, why do I have mold?
Because mold grows on indoor moisture, not regional humidity. Finished basements, evaporative coolers, slab leaks and snowmelt create damp indoor pockets where mold thrives even in a dry climate.
Do swamp coolers cause mold?
They can. Evaporative coolers add moisture to indoor air all summer, which condenses in cooler upstairs rooms, closets and bathrooms and can feed mold.
Is Broomfield at risk of flood-related mold?
Yes. The Cache la Poudre River runs through town and the 2013 floods showed how fast it can rise, and slow-drying basements grew mold for months afterward.
Why do basements get mold here?
Finished basements combine a high local water table, spring snowmelt against foundations, and limited airflow — a recipe for the kind of persistent damp mold needs.

Mold in your Broomfield home?

We know exactly how Northern Colorado homes trap moisture. Call (720) 706-9529.

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