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Mold Inspectors in Salt Lake City, UT

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Updated May 2026
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CT
Salt Lake City, UT
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MH
Salt Lake City, UT
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Mold Inspectors in Salt Lake City, Utah

Finding a qualified mold inspector in Salt Lake City feels like it should be straightforward—you’ve got a basement that smells off, or you’re closing on a house and want peace of mind before signing. Instead, you end up scrolling through listings where half the names don’t have credentials listed, the other half quote you $150 (red flag), and nobody answers their phone on a Tuesday afternoon. This directory exists because hiring the wrong inspector—someone without proper certification, someone who doesn’t actually sample the air, someone who just guesses—costs you way more in missed problems or unnecessary remediation than it would’ve cost to hire the right person the first time.

How to Choose a Mold Inspector in Salt Lake City

Look for verifiable credentials, not just experience. CMI (Certified Mold Inspector), ACAC CMC (Council-certified Microbial Consultant), or IAC2 Certified Indoor Air Quality Inspector means the person has passed a real exam and follows documented protocols. “Licensed” in Utah means something different—the state doesn’t license mold inspectors, so any inspector claiming licensure is either confused or misleading you. Credentials matter because they signal the person knows how to interpret moisture readings, recognize when a visual inspection alone isn’t enough, and send samples to accredited third-party labs instead of interpreting them in-house.

Verify they do air and surface sampling. A real mold inspection includes moisture mapping (thermal imaging or moisture meters), visual assessment, and—this is the critical part—lab samples from both the air and suspected problem areas. If someone says “I can tell just by looking” or offers to test samples themselves, they’re not doing the job right. Third-party labs cost money, which is why some inspectors skip them. Don’t let them.

Ask about their process and turnaround. A proper inspection takes 2–4 hours for a residential property. Lab results come back in 5–7 business days. If someone promises a full report in 48 hours, they’re cutting corners. Get a written scope of work before they show up—it should specify which areas get sampled and why.

Pro Tip: Salt Lake City’s dry climate and older Victorian homes in neighborhoods like Federal Heights and Sugarhouse mean mold problems often hide in attics and crawl spaces where moisture concentrates seasonally. A good inspector will ask about your home’s age, any history of roof leaks, and whether you’ve noticed condensation. If they don’t ask, they’re not thinking through the local risk profile.

What to Expect

A mold inspection in Salt Lake City typically runs $250–$600 depending on the property size and whether you want remediation oversight included. You’ll get a written report with photos, lab results showing mold species and spore counts, moisture readings, and clear recommendations—either “no action needed,” “monitor this area,” or “remediation required with this protocol.” Most inspectors turn reports around within a week of the lab results arriving.

Reality Check: If an inspector quotes you $150 for a full inspection with lab sampling, the math doesn’t work. Lab fees alone are $100–$200. The cheap quote means corners are being cut—either fewer samples, no lab testing, or they’re padding the remediation bid later.

Local Market Overview

Salt Lake City’s real estate market moves fast, and water damage from winter snowmelt or spring flooding is common enough that many home buyers now request mold inspections as standard. Utah has no state licensing requirement for mold inspectors, which means the field includes both rigorous professionals and people who watched a YouTube video last month. This directory filters for the former.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a mold inspector cost in Salt Lake City?

Mold Inspector services in Salt Lake City typically run $200-800 per inspection, depending on scope, complexity, and turnaround requirements. Expedited work and specialized equipment add cost.

What should I look for in a mold inspector?

Look for CMI — it's the credential that separates qualified mold inspectors from the rest. Also verify insurance, check reviews, and confirm they can handle your project's specific requirements.

How many mold inspectors are in Salt Lake City?

There are currently 2 mold inspectors listed in Salt Lake City, UT on MoldRegistry.

What does "Sponsored" mean on a listing?

Sponsored providers pay for premium placement and appear at the top of search results. They have claimed profiles and typically respond faster to quote requests. All providers on MoldRegistry — sponsored or not — are real businesses.