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Mold in Los Angeles, CA

Vetted local mold pros in the Los Angeles metro — inspection, containment, HEPA removal, moisture-source fix.

Recent floods · Los Angeles

No recent flood events near Los Angeles — see the live board.

One local call connects you with vetted, independent mold remediation pros serving the Los Angeles metro area — inspection and testing, containment with HEPA air filtration, safe removal, and the moisture-source fix that keeps it from coming back.

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Los Angeles County · California · Map © OpenStreetMap contributors

Mold risk in Los Angeles

88

federally-declared disasters in Los Angeles County (FEMA)

20

tied to flooding, hurricanes or storms (FEMA)

13.9"

average annual precipitation (NOAA)

Mold follows moisture: any leak, flood or slow drip that stays wet for 24–48 hours can start growth. Los Angeles is dry — only about 13.9" of rain a year (NOAA) — so most mold here traces to an indoor source: a hidden plumbing leak, a slab seep, or a bath that never fully dries. Either way it is one job in two halves — dry the structure fast, then remove whatever stayed wet too long.

Pros in the network serve the Los Angeles metro area.

Sources: FEMA OpenFEMA — federally-declared disaster history (county FIPS 06037) · NOAA NCEI — 1991–2020 Climate Normals (CULVER CITY, CA US)

Recent events in Los Angeles

Live from the DisasterStatus event tracker — Los Angeles is named in each event's affected area.

Rules & permits in Los Angeles

Local rules & permits

CSLB license needed for jobs $1,000+; no state mold license

In California, anyone performing construction or restoration work where the combined labor and materials total $1,000 or more, or where any structural work is involved (e.g., opening walls, removing drywall/insulation), must hold a license from the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) — typically a B (General Building) or an appropriate C-classification. (The licensure threshold rose from $500 to $1,000 under AB 2622, effective January 1, 2025.) California does not issue a state mold-remediation license, so mold work involving structural repair falls under CSLB classifications rather than a mold-specific credential. CSLB actively cites unlicensed operators, so homeowners should confirm a contractor's license at cslb.ca.gov before hiring.

California Contractors State License Board (CSLB)

800-321-2752

cslb.ca.gov

Source: cslb.ca.gov

These are local government rules and offices — they change and depend on your exact address. Confirm with the official source before you act.

Nearby coverage

Mold Remediation near Los Angeles

Counties served: Los Angeles County

Call (833) 652-7533