How to Remove and Prevent Bathroom Mold — Causes & Fixes
How do I get rid of mold in my bathroom and keep it from coming back?
Most bathroom mold is surface mold on grout, caulk, and ceilings caused by trapped moisture; you can scrub it off, then prevent it by venting steam and keeping humidity down. Mold that keeps returning through walls or behind tile usually means a hidden leak that needs a pro.
ℹ️ Reference only: For general reference only. This guide does not guarantee any result — every home is different. Verify against your local building codes and a licensed professional before acting, especially for electrical, gas, plumbing, structural, or roof work.
Common causes
- No exhaust fan, or one that is too weak or never gets turned on, so shower steam stays in the room (most common) Quick check: Run the fan and hold a square of toilet paper to the grille — if it doesn't hold, the fan is weak or not pulling air; also confirm it actually vents outside, not into the attic.
- Old, cracked, or porous caulk and grout that soaks up and holds water (most common) Quick check: Look at the caulk line where the tub/shower meets the wall and floor — if it's blackened, peeling, or spongy, mold has rooted into it.
- Wet towels, bath mats, and shower curtains/liners that stay damp and don't dry out (common) Quick check: Touch the lower folds of the shower liner and the back of bath mats — persistent dampness and a slimy pink/black film signals a chronic moisture source.
- A hidden leak — supply line, drain, toilet wax ring, or behind-tile waterproofing failure — feeding mold from inside the wall or floor (less common) Quick check: Look for mold that bleeds back fast after cleaning, soft/spongy flooring, peeling paint, or stains on the ceiling of the room below the bathroom.
- Cold surfaces (uninsulated exterior wall or ceiling) where warm shower air condenses into water (less common) Quick check: Mold concentrated on one exterior wall or a ceiling corner, with water beads forming after a shower, points to condensation from poor insulation.
How to fix it
- Ventilate before you start: open a window, run the exhaust fan, and wear rubber gloves, an N95 mask, and eye protection. Mold spores and cleaning fumes both irritate lungs and eyes.
- For surface mold on tile, grout, and painted walls, scrub with a cleaner — either a store-bought mold/mildew remover, OR undiluted white vinegar in a spray bottle (vinegar penetrates porous grout and caulk better and is the gentler choice), OR diluted bleach (CDC: up to 1 cup of bleach per 1 gallon of water). Let it dwell about 10 minutes, scrub with a stiff brush, then rinse and dry. Test bleach on a hidden spot first — it can lighten colored grout and caulk.
- NEVER mix bleach with vinegar, ammonia, or any other cleaner — combinations release toxic gas. Pick ONE product, and if you switch products, rinse thoroughly and ventilate in between.
- For mold in caulk that won't scrub clean, cut out the old caulk completely, let the joint dry fully, and re-caulk with a 100% silicone caulk labeled mildew-resistant for kitchen/bath. Mold roots inside the caulk, so surface cleaning won't fix it.
- For a moldy shower curtain liner or bath mat, machine wash it or just replace the liner — they're cheap and rarely worth saving.
- Prevent recurrence: run the exhaust fan during every shower and for 20-30 minutes after; squeegee or wipe down shower walls; spread out towels and the liner so they dry; and keep bathroom humidity down (a hygrometer kept under ~50% and, if needed, a small dehumidifier help).
- If your fan is weak or vents into the attic, upgrade to a properly sized fan (rough rule of thumb: CFM at least equal to the bathroom's square footage, more for larger baths) ducted to the outside. A like-for-like swap into existing wiring and duct is DIY only if you first turn OFF the circuit at the breaker and confirm the wires are dead — never work on it live. Adding new wiring or a new circuit is an electrician's job.
- If mold keeps returning fast in the same spot after a thorough cleaning, stop scrubbing and investigate for a hidden leak or insulation/condensation problem — repeated regrowth is a symptom, not a cleaning failure.
DIY or call a pro?
Surface mold on grout, caulk, painted walls, ceilings, curtains, and a like-for-like fan swap into existing wiring/ductwork are DIY. Call a pro when: mold covers a large area (the EPA's rough threshold is about 10 square feet or more), it keeps coming back through walls or under flooring (signals a hidden leak), you find soft/rotted drywall, subfloor, or framing, or anyone in the home has asthma, allergies, or a weakened immune system. Use a licensed plumber for a suspected supply/drain leak, a licensed electrician for any new fan wiring or circuit work, and a mold remediation contractor for large or recurring infestations and any structural water damage.
Tools & parts
- Rubber gloves
- N95 mask / respirator
- Eye protection
- Stiff scrub brush or old toothbrush
- Spray bottle
- Mold/mildew remover, or white vinegar, or household bleach
- Utility knife or caulk-removal tool
- 100% silicone mildew-resistant kitchen/bath caulk
- Caulk gun
- Squeegee
- Microfiber cloths
- Optional: hygrometer and small dehumidifier
- Optional: replacement exhaust fan
- For a fan swap: non-contact voltage tester
Keep a record of every fix you make — what broke, what it cost, how you solved it.
Track your home's fixes in Home Story →Based on: EPA mold cleanup and remediation guidance (general public guidance, including the ~10 sq ft threshold); CDC guidance on mold cleanup, bleach dilution, and protective equipment; Manufacturer guidance for silicone caulk and mold/mildew bathroom cleaners; Reputable DIY references (This Old House, Family Handyman) on caulk replacement and bath exhaust fan sizing; Building-code norms on bathroom exhaust fans venting to the exterior and on de-energizing circuits before electrical work
This is general home-maintenance information, not professional inspection, medical, or remediation advice. Conditions in your home may differ. When in doubt — especially with large infestations, hidden leaks, structural damage, electrical work, or health concerns — consult a licensed professional and follow local building codes.