Mold Removal, Remediation & Testing Easton, CT - Green Restoration

Mold Removal, Remediation & Testing Easton, CT

Hemlock Reservoir Watershed Septic Crawl Spaces Cleared In 2026 1700s Fieldstone Basements, S520, ACAC Sampling

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(203) 742-0492

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Reviewed by Marvin Riveira · Licensed & Insured In CT · Owner-Operated

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Same DayInspection ResponseAcross Fairfield County
5,000+Properties RestoredCT · NY · MA
35+Years ExperienceIICRC S520 Certified
Mold Remediation Services

Complete Mold Remediation In Easton, CT

From Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic-saturated crawl spaces under Aquarion Water Company DEP-protected protocols to 1700s Stepney and Old Redding Road fieldstone basement seepage and Aspetuck River lowland Stachybotrys off Center Road, every Easton mold scope contained by S520 crews dispatched same day in 2026.

Same-Day Mold Inspection And Air Sampling

Aspetuck Reservoir watershed soils and Aspetuck River corridor lowlands keep Easton rural-septic properties chronically damp, masking colonies behind 1700s post-and-beam plaster and Sport Hill attic sheathing. Green Restoration dispatches same-day with thermal imaging, Tramex moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling to document full scope across Silver Hill and Stepney Road large-lot estates during one site visit.

IICRC S520, ACAC air sampling, Fairfield County

mold inspection Easton CTair sampling CTthermal imaging Fairfield County

Full Mold Remediation And Removal

Aspetuck River lowland seepage and septic-only leach-field soils along Silver Hill and Stepney Road supply Easton's 1700s post-and-beam farmhouses with chronic sub-slab moisture driving colony growth inside original timber framing. Green Restoration applies IICRC S520 protocol with sealed HEPA containment, negative-air pressure, assembly removal, and EPA-registered antimicrobial treatment. Post-and-beam assemblies receive minimal-demo, structure-preserving scopes.

IICRC S520, hospital-grade containment

mold remediation Eastonmold removal CTHEPA filtration

Crawl Space And Septic-Soil Mold Cleanup

Three-acre minimum lots across Easton sit on septic-only systems where saturated leach-field soils drive chronic ground moisture into low-clearance crawl spaces under Sport Hill and Far Hills estates. Green Restoration removes affected batt insulation, treats joists and subfloor under IICRC S520, installs reinforced vapor barriers, and integrates dehumidification across the rural Easton residential parcel base.

Vapor barrier, source correction

crawl space mold Easton CTseptic moldjoist mold
Heavy mold colonization across OSB sheathing between wood rafters with fiberglass insulation below in an Easton Connecticut attic, documented during a same-day Green Restoration IICRC S520 mold inspection
IICRCS520 Containment
HEPANegative-Air Filtration

Additional Mold Remediation Services In Easton

Fieldstone Basement Mold Remediation

1700s Easton farmhouse fieldstone basements off Stepney and Old Redding Road carry wall seepage through unmortared joints and dirt-floor humidity that grows Stachybotrys behind finished partitions and stored heirlooms. Green Restoration performs selective demolition of finished partitions, cleans original fieldstone faces under IICRC S520, and corrects perimeter drainage before historic Easton farmhouse basements return to controlled service.

fieldstone basement mold Easton1700s farmhouse mold CTStepney mold

Attic Mold Cleanup

Tree-canopy shade on Sport Hill and Far Hills estates slows roof drying and traps condensation against sheathing where bath-fan retrofits were routed into attic space rather than through the roofline. Green Restoration re-vents fans outboard, treats OSB or original board sheathing under IICRC S520, and replaces saturated batt insulation across Easton's heavily shaded residential rooflines.

attic mold Easton CTestate home moldOSB sheathing mold

Black Mold (Stachybotrys) Remediation

Septic-saturated leach-field soils and Aspetuck River lowland groundwater create weeks-long sub-slab saturation allowing Stachybotrys chartarum to colonize 1700s post-and-beam framing and finished-basement paperboard along Stepney Road. Green Restoration installs double-layer sealed containment with negative-air pressure, removes all IICRC S520 Category 3 materials, and confirms spore counts at or below outdoor baseline via independent ACAC sampling.

black mold EastonStachybotrys CTtoxic mold removal

Finished Basement Mold Cleanup

Stepney and Aspetuck River area finished basements receive groundwater intrusion where Mill River and Aspetuck tributary lowlands feed perched water tables through foundation cold joints during the spring melt and heavy summer events. Green Restoration removes affected drywall, cleans joist faces, dries framing to sub-16% MC under IICRC S520, and corrects the moisture source before reconstruction.

basement mold Easton CTAspetuck River moldMill River mold

HVAC And Duct Mold Cleaning

Aspetuck Reservoir watershed tree canopy keeps Easton interiors at elevated relative humidity through summer months, allowing evaporator coils and duct liner to support active growth across estate HVAC systems. Green Restoration cleans whole systems per NADCA ACR standards with coil sanitization, air-handler treatment, and duct surface remediation across Silver Hill and Sport Hill Road large-lot residential parcels.

HVAC mold Eastonduct cleaning CTair handler mold

Dry Ice CO2 Pellet Blasting

Silver Hill estate timber-frame original framing and Stepney Road 1700s post-and-beam farmhouse assemblies need contaminant lift without dust or moisture intrusion. Green Restoration deploys dry-ice CO2 pellet blasting where pellets sublimate to gas on impact, clearing colonies from Aspetuck River lowland joists and Old Redding Road fieldstone basement faces under IICRC S520 with zero blast-media waste.

dry ice blasting EastonCO2 pellet mold removaltimber mold blasting

Soda Blasting Mold Remediation

Sport Hill Road estate original interior millwork and Far Hills 1700s farmhouse plaster-on-lath finishes cannot tolerate aggressive abrasive remediation after septic-field saturation. Green Restoration uses FDA GRAS sodium bicarbonate soda blasting under negative-air containment to remove Penicillium, Cladosporium, and Aspergillus from delicate period substrates, preserving Mill River area historic millwork and Stepney Road antique cabinetry across Easton scopes.

soda blasting Eastonsodium bicarbonate moldplaster mold removal

Multi-Species Mold Identification

Aspetuck River lowland septic-saturated basements grow Stachybotrys and Chaetomium during prolonged wet conditions, Sport Hill estate attics develop Aspergillus and Alternaria in shaded sheathing, and Aspetuck Reservoir watershed crawl spaces carry Cladosporium and Penicillium. Green Restoration coordinates ACAC-certified lab speciation with IICRC S520 protocol, matching containment class, antimicrobial chemistry, and clearance baseline per organism present.

mold species ID EastonStachybotrys identificationlab speciation

Post-Remediation Clearance Testing

ACAC-protocol third-party air sampling verifies Easton rural-septic and Aspetuck River corridor properties meet or fall below outdoor baseline spore counts before re-occupancy of remediated assemblies. Green Restoration coordinates independent lab analysis covering 1700s post-and-beam farmhouse basements, Sport Hill attic assemblies, and Aspetuck watershed crawl spaces, with an outdoor control sample reflecting Easton's forested rural ambient baseline.

mold clearance testing Eastonair quality verificationthird-party sampling

Do Not Let Mold Spread Another 24 Hours. Same-Day Inspection.

See Our Work In Easton

Mold Remediation In Easton

Why Choose Us In Easton

Owner-led mold remediation with same-day inspection, lab-verified clearance testing, and hospital-grade containment across Easton and Fairfield County.

Same-Day Mold Inspection

IICRC S520 certified inspectors arrive same day with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC air sampling kits across Easton Center, Stepney, and Aspetuck.

Sameday dispatch

IICRC S520 Hospital-Grade Containment

Sealed plastic sheeting, negative air pressure, and HEPA-filtered scrubbers isolate every mold work area from the rest of your Easton home.

S520certified protocol

Owner-Operated Local Crew

Every Easton mold job is personally overseen by the local owner, from first inspection to final clearance.

35+years experience

Lab-Verified Clearance Testing

Third-party ACAC air sampling confirms post-remediation spore counts at or below outdoor baseline before you re-occupy your Easton property.

Labverified spore counts
Understanding The Risk

What Untreated Mold Costs Your Easton Home

Most Easton homeowners do not notice mold until a musty crawl space, a damp fieldstone basement, or attic streaking forces the issue. Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic constraints, dense tree canopy, and Aspetuck and Mill River tributaries make it compound fast in Fairfield County.

Hemlock Reservoir Watershed Septic

Aquarion DEP-Protected Soils Push Humidity Into Crawl Spaces

Every Easton home runs on a private septic system with no public sewer service, and most sit inside the Aquarion Water Company DEP-protected Hemlock Reservoir and Easton Reservoir watersheds with strict 3-acre minimum leach-field zoning. Saturated subgrade pushes moisture up into crawl spaces year-round, holding relative humidity above 70 percent on joists and subfloor.

1700s Fieldstone Basement Seepage

Stepney And Old Redding Road Farmhouses Concentrate The Risk

Stepney, Old Redding Road, and Center Road have working 1700s and 1800s Easton farmhouses with original fieldstone foundations. Stone-and-mortar walls wick groundwater straight into the basement interior, and dirt-floor sections hold relative humidity above 80 percent for months at a time, growing Stachybotrys behind finished partition walls.

Aspetuck And Mill River Tributary Flooding

Lowland Properties Off Westport Road And Black Rock Turnpike

The Aspetuck River and Mill River corridors cut through Easton's lowlands. Properties along these corridors and off Westport Road and Black Rock Turnpike sit inside FEMA flood zones, and spring snowmelt and nor'easter rain grow toxic Stachybotrys behind finished basement walls for weeks before the homeowner notices.

Dense Tree Canopy Keeps Homes Damp

Far Hills And Sport Hill Wooded Estates

Easton is one of the most heavily wooded inland towns in Fairfield County, with 3-acre minimum zoning protecting tree cover across Far Hills, Sport Hill, and Morehouse Highway. Continuous shade across siding, roofs, and foundations slows the drying that prevents mold growth on every exterior surface and feeds attic and crawl-space humidity year-round.

Well-Water And Septic-Saturated Yards

Leach-Field Soils Feed Crawl-Space Moisture

Leach-field soils and well-water saturation sit close to grade on most Easton parcels and stay saturated for weeks after heavy rain or snowmelt. That standing soil moisture feeds straight into crawl spaces, and bath-fan and dryer condensate often vents into the same cavity, layering humidity on top of an already-wet subgrade.

Attic Mold From Added Insulation

Historic Ventilation Buried On 1700s Farmhouses

Many Easton homeowners added blown-in attic insulation over the past two decades to 1700s and 1800s farmhouse roofs that were originally designed for passive ventilation. The added depth often buries the soffit and ridge vents, traps shower and laundry humidity against cold sheathing, and grows heavy mold across the plywood and rafters within a few seasons.

Green Restoration technician in full Tyvek PPE and respirator treating an attic with visible black mold across the roof sheathing and rafters during active IICRC S520 mold remediation in an Easton CT home
Local Expertise

Why Easton Properties Need Professional Mold Remediation

Easton\'s Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic constraints, Aspetuck and Mill River tributary lowlands, dense tree canopy, and 1700s fieldstone-basement housing stock create mold conditions surface cleaning cannot solve. Hospital-grade containment with lab-verified clearance is the only durable fix.

Green Restoration technician in branded PPE applying EPA-registered antimicrobial treatment to an exposed wall cavity during IICRC S520 mold remediation at an Easton CT residential property
1

IICRC S520 Certified Easton Crews

Every Green Restoration mold crew is IICRC S520 certified with hospital-grade containment protocol. We have remediated septic-saturated crawl spaces off Stepney, fieldstone basements in Old Redding Road farmhouses, and attic sheathing in Far Hills estate homes. The certification is the floor, not the ceiling.

2

Same-Day Inspection Across Fairfield County

A technician is on site in Easton the same day you call. We bring thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling kits on the first visit so the scope of work is documented before any pricing conversation starts.

3

Moisture Source Corrected, Not Just Covered

Most Easton mold comes back because the septic, drainage, ventilation, or roof problem was never solved. We coordinate directly with septic contractors, roofers, plumbers, and HVAC pros on Stepney farmhouses and Sport Hill estates so the root cause is fixed before we close the wall.

4

Lab-Verified Clearance You Can Hand Your Adjuster

Every Easton mold job closes with third-party air sampling and written clearance at or below outdoor baseline. The file we deliver includes scope, containment photos, lab reports, and the IICRC-standard documentation that major carriers including State Farm, Liberty Mutual, USAA, Travelers, Allstate, AIG, and Chubb work with for a clean approval.

Common Mold Problems, Handled

The Mold We See Most in Easton

These are the mold problems we remediate most often, every job run to the IICRC S520 standard, contained with HEPA negative air, and cleared by independent ACAC air testing.

Black mold spreading across poured concrete foundation walls in a damp basement during IICRC S520 mold remediation in a Connecticut home
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Basement & Wall Mold
Basement Wall Mold, Fully Removed
Local Note

In Easton, lowland seepage from the Aspetuck River and dirt-floor humidity grow Stachybotrys in 1700s fieldstone farmhouse cellars.

The Situation

Chronic humidity, a sump failure, or seepage through the slab edge and foundation wall keeps a basement damp enough for mold to spread across concrete, framing, and stored belongings. On finished basements the same moisture colonizes the back of drywall and the wall cavity long before any stain reaches the room.

How We Remediate It

Our crews set sealed containment with negative air pressure and HEPA-filtered air scrubbers, then remove or HEPA-clean the affected materials and treat the foundation wall and framing with an EPA-registered antimicrobial per IICRC S520. The moisture source, seepage, a failed sump, or high humidity, is corrected and dehumidification is set before anything is closed back up.

Cleared To Standard

Third-party ACAC air sampling confirms spore counts at or below the outdoor baseline before reconstruction begins. Every scope line, containment photo, and lab report is documented for your insurer so the claim moves on evidence.

IICRC S520 ContainmentHEPA Negative AirACAC Clearance Tested
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Scenario 1 of 5: Basement & Wall Mold

Emergency Mold Guide

What To Do When You Find Mold In Your Home

The first 24 hours matter. Follow these steps to contain the colony and protect your air quality while waiting for our IICRC S520 certified crew to arrive.

What To Do Immediately

1
Call Certified Remediation If Growth Exceeds 10 Sq Ft

EPA guidelines recommend professional remediation for any visible mold patch larger than a 3x3 square foot area. Anything more releases spores beyond safe DIY containment.

2
Contain The Affected Area

Close doors leading to the contaminated room and turn off HVAC immediately. Every minute of shared air movement spreads spores throughout the rest of your home.

3
Document Everything With Photos

Take timestamped photos of all visible mold and any related water damage before cleanup begins. Your insurance adjuster will need this for the claim file.

4
Wear N95, Gloves & Eye Protection

If you must enter the contaminated area before remediators arrive, wear an N95 respirator, nitrile gloves, and sealed eye protection. Skin and airway contact with active colonies is how symptoms start.

5
Address The Moisture Source First

Mold needs water to grow. Fix the leak, correct the humidity, or remediate the flood before any cleanup attempt. Scrubbing without moisture correction guarantees regrowth.

6
Request Clearance Testing After Remediation

Third-party post-remediation air sampling confirms spore counts are at or below outdoor baseline. Without it, you have no way to verify the work actually worked.

What NOT To Do

Do NOT Spray Bleach On Porous Surfaces

Bleach lifts color on drywall, carpet, and wood but does not kill mold at the root. The colony returns within weeks and the stain looks smaller only because the surface is lighter.

Do NOT Run Whole-House HVAC

Central heating and cooling circulates spores through every duct run, colonizing rooms that were never affected. Shut the system off until professional containment is in place.

Do NOT Attempt Removal Over 10 Sq Ft

EPA guidelines require professional containment for anything larger than a 3x3 patch. Tearing out drywall without negative air pressure releases millions of spores instantly.

Do NOT Paint Over Visible Mold

Even mildew-resistant primer cannot seal an active colony. The mold feeds on the paper backing of drywall and bleeds through within weeks, often worse than before.

Do NOT Ignore Musty Odors

A persistent musty smell without visible mold almost always means a hidden colony behind walls, under flooring, or in ductwork. Smell usually precedes visibility by months.

Do NOT Remove Materials Without Containment

Disturbed mold releases millions of spores in seconds. Ripping carpet, pulling drywall, or breaking up tile without proper negative air pressure contaminates the entire home.

Our Process

Our Mold Remediation Process In Easton, CT

From the first call to final walkthrough, every step is documented, insured, and owner-supervised.

Green Restoration mold technician using a moisture meter during a same-day mold inspection in a Easton CT home
01Current Step
5 StepsStart to Finish
100%Owner-Supervised
DirectInsurance Billing
Service Area

Mold Remediation Coverage In Easton, CT

Full service mold inspection, containment, remediation, and lab-verified clearance testing for Easton homes and businesses. Same-day inspection response across Fairfield County.

Neighborhoods We Serve In Easton
Easton CenterStepneyAspetuckFar HillsSport HillMorehouse HighwayWestport RoadBlack Rock TurnpikeOld Redding RoadCenter Road

Green Restoration provides IICRC S520 certified mold remediation in Easton, CT, serving neighborhoods including Easton Center, Stepney, and Aspetuck throughout Fairfield County. With direct access via Route 58, Route 59, and the Merritt Parkway, our certified technicians arrive same-day with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling kits. We work directly with all major insurance carriers, from initial inspection through hospital-grade containment and lab-verified clearance testing.

As a locally operated franchise serving Stratford, Easton, and the surrounding Fairfield County coast, we know the mold conditions Easton properties face: Aquarion-managed Hemlock Reservoir and Easton Reservoir watershed septic-leach-field saturation feeding crawl-space humidity above 70 percent under CT DEP-protected protocols, Aspetuck and Mill River tributary flooding behind finished basement walls off Westport Road and Black Rock Turnpike, fieldstone-wall seepage in 1700s Stepney and Old Redding Road farmhouses, and dense tree canopy across Far Hills, Sport Hill, and Morehouse Highway keeping siding, roofs, and foundations damp year-round. Our crews are trained to handle every scenario, from a single-area attic remediation to a whole-house Stachybotrys containment, and we coordinate directly with adjusters from State Farm, Travelers, Liberty Mutual, and all other major carriers.

Active Mold Exposure In Easton?

Same-day inspection dispatch, 24/7/365.

(203) 742-0492

IICRC S520 · Licensed & Insured · All Insurance Accepted

Serving Easton (06612) & Nearby Towns

All Towns Served By Green Restoration Of Stratford And Fairfield County For IICRC S520 Mold Inspection And Remediation.

Hours Of Operation
24/7 Emergency ResponseCall Anytime, Day Or NightMold, Water Damage, Fire, Storms, & Sewage Emergencies Dispatched Immediately
Scheduled AppointmentsMonday Through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PMNon-Emergency Inspections, Mold Assessments, & Air Sampling Consultations
Local Response

Same-Day Mold Inspection In Easton, CT

Our IICRC S520 crews dispatch to Easton same day in 2026, from Easton Center and 1700s Stepney plaster farmhouses to Old Redding Road fieldstone basements and Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic-leach-field crawl spaces across Far Hills and Sport Hill under Aquarion DEP-protected residential septic protocols. Green Restoration is not a licensed public adjuster and does not negotiate claims on your behalf.

06612ZIP Code

Easton ZIP 06612, founded 1845, anchors a locked silo-aware mold remediation dispatch zone with Fairfield County crew arrival from our nearest IICRC S520 office. Same-day inspection covers every property class across this inland town, from historic Colonials to modern construction within the Easton mailing perimeter.

1700-1960Housing-Stock Era

Predominant Easton housing stock spans 1700-1960, which dictates the remediation approach taken. Plaster-and-lath cavities, fieldstone basements, post-war ranch crawl spaces, and modern OSB sheathing each demand different IICRC S520 containment, drying, and clearance protocols matched to the specific assembly our crew opens on every job.

Aspetuck RiverPrimary Drainage

Mold risk in Easton tracks the Aspetuck River and its reservoir as the dominant moisture vectors. Our scope sequencing prioritizes assemblies adjacent to this drainage corridor first, because chronic capillary wicking and freshwater flood-event saturation drive 80% of recurrence when source correction is left incomplete.

Reservoir WatershedClimate Exposure

Easton sits in the Aspetuck River reservoir watershed, an inland septic-only town where well-and-septic lots and protected watershed land keep groundwater tables high beneath rural homes. Damp crawl spaces feed mold pressure, so crews engineer containment, apply targeted antimicrobial treatment, and verify dry conditions through post-remediation lab clearance.

Green Restoration branded fleet vehicles ready for service in Darien CT
About Green Restoration

About Green Restoration In Easton, CT

Local Owner, Fairfield County, CT, Green Restoration

Your Easton Mold Remediation Specialists Since 2014

Green Restoration provides IICRC S520 certified mold inspection, containment, remediation, and lab-verified clearance testing for homes and businesses in Easton, CT. Our process focuses on accurate spore sampling, hospital-grade containment, physical removal, and moisture source correction to stop regrowth. We work with property owners and insurance providers to document scope clearly and restore affected areas the right way, without unnecessary steps or delays.

Green Restoration local owner
Green RestorationLocal Owner, Fairfield County, CT
35+ Years ExperienceHIC.0702252

I've spent 35 years in this industry, from hands on restoration work to managing large scale commercial losses. Every project we take on gets my direct oversight, because I believe the owner should be the one standing behind the work. We don't cut corners, we don't upsell, and we treat every home like it's our own. That's why families across Darien and Fairfield County continue to trust us when it matters most. Your property is in good hands.

IICRC Certified FirmLicensed & Insured In CTBBB A+ Rated Business
Local Success Stories

Trusted by Families in Easton & Fairfield County

5.0 out of 5, Rated by your neighbors on Google

We discovered mold when removing our pellet stove and called Green Restoration for help. David was very communicative and helpful throughout the entire process. He did the job thoroughly and professionally. Highly recommended!

DW

David Woolner

Mold Remediation
Verified • October 2025

I had a fantastic experience with Green Restoration. From start to finish, the team was professional, thorough, and extremely knowledgeable. David came for the initial inspection and took the time to explain the entire process.

AG

Annmarie Gieparda

Mold Remediation
Verified • March 2025

We had mold due to a water leak in our half finished basement. David and his crew did a great job, we were very satisfied. I would highly recommend Green Restoration to anyone.

T

Tanya

Water Damage
Verified • February 2025

I needed my entire condo completely cleaned after a soot blow back. Green Restoration was top shelf! So thorough and professional. Thank you so much!

JH

Jacki Hornish

Fire & Soot Cleanup
Verified • September 2025
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Mold Remediation Pricing

Mold Remediation Cost In Easton, CT

Most Easton claims in 2026 fall in the $3,000 to $8,000 mid-tier, especially Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic-served crawl-space encapsulation, 1700s Stepney and Old Redding Road fieldstone basement remediation, and Aspetuck and Mill River lowland Stachybotrys work.

Small Project, Single Area

$1,500 to $4,500

Bathroom wall, window frame, attic patch, isolated growth under 10 sq ft

Most Common

Medium Project, Crawl Space / Basement

$3,000 to $8,000

Crawl-space section, fieldstone basement wall, single-room remediation with containment

Large Project, Whole-Home

$8,000 to $25,000+

Multi-room, Stachybotrys, structural mold, HVAC remediation, attic sheathing

Final cost depends on containment complexity, square footage affected, mold type (Stachybotrys vs Aspergillus vs Penicillium), HVAC remediation scope, and whether drywall, insulation, or subfloor replacement is needed. Use the calculator above for a personalized Easton estimate.

Expert Answers

Hemlock Reservoir Watershed Mold FAQs

Clear 2026 answers on Aquarion DEP-protected Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic-leach-field crawl-space humidity, 1700s Stepney and Old Redding Road fieldstone basement Stachybotrys, Aspetuck and Mill River tributary flooding, insurance coverage, and lab-verified clearance testing across Easton, CT.

Same-day mold inspection across Easton and the rest of Fairfield County, 24/7. Our crews arrive with thermal imaging, moisture meters, and ACAC-certified air sampling so scope is documented from the first visit, whether you are in Easton Center, Stepney, or Far Hills. Call (203) 742-0492 any time, day or night.

Mold remediation in Easton typically ranges from $1,500 to $4,500 for single-area cleanup (bathroom wall, window frame, attic patch), $3,000 to $8,000 for crawl-space or fieldstone basement projects (where most Easton claims settle given the town's Hemlock Reservoir watershed septic constraints and 1700s farmhouse housing stock), and $8,000 to $25,000+ for whole-home Stachybotrys, multi-room containment, or HVAC remediation. Pricing depends on containment complexity, square footage affected, mold type, and whether drywall, insulation, or subfloor need replacement. We provide a written estimate on-site after moisture readings and ACAC-certified air sampling confirm full scope.

Every Easton home runs on a private septic system with no public sewer service, and most parcels sit inside the Aquarion Water Company DEP-protected Hemlock Reservoir and Easton Reservoir watersheds under 3-acre minimum leach-field zoning. Saturated subgrade soil pushes humidity straight up into the crawl space, where it settles on joists and subfloor and holds relative humidity above 70 percent year-round. Dense tree canopy across Far Hills, Sport Hill, and Morehouse Highway slows drying further. Vapor barriers, dedicated dehumidification, and IICRC S520 antimicrobial treatment are the durable fix.

Most Connecticut homeowner policies cover mold remediation when it results from a covered water loss, such as a burst pipe, appliance failure, or sudden leak. Mold from long-term maintenance issues, chronic humidity, septic saturation, or flooding typically requires separate flood or mold endorsement. Green Restoration submits IICRC S520 documentation, clearance test results, and lab-analyzed spore counts your adjuster requires directly to every major carrier.

Most Easton mold remediation projects take 3 to 7 days from containment setup to clearance testing. Larger crawl-space encapsulation or 1700s fieldstone basement projects can extend to 8 to 10 days. Timeline depends on mold type (black mold requires additional precautions), square footage affected, and whether moisture source correction requires a septic contractor, roofer, or HVAC pro before close-up.

Call (203) 742-0492