Most Perth homeowners know that mould on a wall or ceiling needs to be dealt with. Far fewer realise that the same problem — often far worse — can exist silently inside their air conditioner, circulating through every room of the home every time the system runs.
Unlike visible wall mould, mould inside an AC unit gives almost no warning. It establishes itself in dark, enclosed components — evaporator coils, drain pans, blower wheels — and releases spores directly into the air you breathe. By the time there is a smell or a visible sign, a significant colony has usually been growing for weeks or months.
This guide explains why Perth homes face a higher risk than most Australian cities, what mould inside an AC system does to your health, how to spot the warning signs early, and what genuine professional remediation looks like.
At Air Cool Care, mould-related service calls are among the most frequent we receive across Perth. In the majority of cases, the mould is well-established inside the evaporator coil or drain pan long before the homeowner has any visible sign. By the time families notice something is wrong, the system has often been distributing spores for months.
Why Does Perth Have a Higher AC Mould Risk Than Most Australian Cities?
What Makes Perth’s Climate So Problematic for Air Conditioner Mould?
Perth’s seasonal climate creates a specific cycle that consistently generates mould inside AC systems — one that differs significantly from Sydney, Melbourne, or Brisbane, and that most generic HVAC advice does not account for.
During Perth’s long summer, AC systems run intensively for months — the evaporator coil stays cold, condensation forms continuously, and the drain pan accumulates moisture throughout every cycle. Then autumn arrives, the system is switched off, and all that residual moisture sits inside a warm, dark space.
In Brisbane or Sydney, ambient humidity stays high year-round. In Perth, the shift to dry autumn air combined with residual internal moisture creates textbook mould conditions. Perth’s fine organic dust — accumulating inside drain pans and on coil surfaces throughout summer — provides the food source mould needs to establish quickly.
When Perth homeowners switch their AC back on in winter or spring, they are frequently circulating mould that has spent weeks quietly growing inside the system.
Perth’s geography also creates different risk levels across the metro area. Coastal western suburbs — including Cottesloe, Scarborough, and Fremantle — experience higher ambient humidity from the sea breeze, accelerating mould establishment on evaporator coils. Hills suburbs such as Kalamunda and Armadale experience greater day-to-night temperature variation, causing more frequent condensation cycles. Eastern suburbs including Midland, Gosnells, and Forrestfield face heavy dust loads from summer easterly winds, providing a richer organic food source for mould inside AC components.
The WA Department of Health’s 2024 Indoor Mould Health Risk Assessment specifically identifies moisture control and proper ventilation as the primary prevention factors for indoor mould. Air conditioning systems that accumulate residual moisture between seasons are a direct risk factor — particularly in Perth, where the seasonal pattern creates concentrated post-summer mould conditions inside sealed HVAC components.
What Are the Health Risks of Mould in an Air Conditioner?
How Does AC Mould Actually Affect Your Health?
The health impact of mould in an AC unit is amplified significantly by how AC systems work. Unlike mould on a wall — which you can see, avoid, and clean — mould inside an AC unit is actively distributed throughout your home every time the system runs.
A 2023 study examining split system air conditioners in homes where occupants had respiratory conditions found that contaminated AC units increased airborne fungal concentrations by up to 137 times compared to clean systems. For a Perth family running their AC for eight to twelve hours a day through summer, this represents sustained, high-concentration mould spore exposure with no obvious visual warning.
Respiratory Effects
Inhaling mould spores inflames the airways, causing persistent coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, and throat irritation. For people with asthma, a mould-contaminated AC system can make previously well-controlled asthma extremely difficult to manage. Spores trigger inflammatory responses that standard medication may not adequately address if the exposure source is not removed.
Allergic Reactions and Who Is Most Vulnerable
Mould spores and the microbial volatile organic compounds (mVOCs) they produce cause allergic symptoms — sneezing, runny nose, itchy and watery eyes, and skin rashes — that are frequently misattributed to hay fever, meaning the AC mould problem continues while families manage symptoms rather than their cause.
Children face the highest long-term risk — early-childhood mould exposure is linked to increased asthma rates. People with asthma or allergies experience direct and significant worsening of their conditions. Elderly residents are at elevated risk of serious Aspergillus infection. Remote workers accumulate far greater total exposure than those away from home for most of the day.
Australian standard AS/NZS 3666 governs microbial control in air handling systems and establishes technical requirements for preventing biological contamination in HVAC equipment. At Air Cool Care, our technicians work to this standard. When we remediate AC mould, we follow a structured process designed to address microbial contamination at the source — not a surface clean that leaves the underlying problem intact.
How Do I Know If My Air Conditioner Has Mould?
What Are the Warning Signs of Mould in an AC System?
The challenge with AC mould is that it lives in components most homeowners never see. These are the warning signs that reliably indicate mould is present before the problem becomes severe.
A musty, damp, or earthy smell when the system starts — particularly after a period of inactivity — is the most consistent early warning. This smell often fades after the system has been running for a while, leading homeowners to assume the problem has resolved. It has not. The smell fades as spore concentrations dilute through the home; the mould continues to grow.
Allergy or asthma symptoms that improve when household members leave the home is a strong indicator that indoor air quality is the source of the problem. If symptoms consistently worsen when the AC is running and improve when the system is off or family members are away, do not wait for a scheduled service.
Visible mould on the grille or around vents means the contamination is already significant. What is visible externally is never the full extent of the problem — the internal coil and drain pan will almost always show worse contamination than what appears on the surface.
Worsening symptoms that do not respond to usual allergy or asthma medication — particularly in a household where the AC is used extensively — warrant an AC inspection alongside any medical assessment.
A system not professionally cleaned in more than 12 months has almost certainly accumulated what mould needs to establish itself in Perth’s climate.
The households where AC mould has caused the most significant health impact are almost always those where symptoms were attributed to hay fever or seasonal allergies while the AC continued distributing spores. Acting on a musty smell the first time costs a fraction of what it costs to address a system left for another year.
What Does Professional AC Mould Remediation Involve?
How Does Air Cool Care Remove Mould from an Air Conditioner?
Professional mould remediation covers the internal components that homeowners cannot safely access — and that filter replacement alone does not address.
The evaporator coil — the primary mould site in most Perth AC systems — is treated with a specialised antimicrobial coil-cleaning solution that penetrates the fin structure and dissolves biological residue and mould colonies. This process cannot be replicated with household products without risking damage to the delicate fin structure.
The drain pan and condensate line are flushed and treated with antimicrobial solution to remove standing mould, algae, and the biological film that allows mould to re-establish between services. A blocked or contaminated drain is consistently one of the primary mould sources in Perth AC systems — a component that standard filter cleaning does not reach.
The blower wheel and fan blades are cleaned to remove dust and organic debris — contaminated fan surfaces distribute mould spores through every room on every cycle. For ducted systems, internal duct surfaces are inspected and treated where contamination is found, and water damage to ceiling cavities is assessed and reported.
Before beginning any work, our technicians assess which components are affected, explain what we find, and confirm the scope with you. If a system is clean and does not need treatment, we say so. Our goal is a genuinely healthier indoor environment — not a service call for its own sake.
How Do I Prevent Mould from Coming Back?
What Maintenance Prevents AC Mould in Perth?
Clean filters every 4 to 6 weeks during summer — in high-dust eastern suburbs, every 3 to 4 weeks. Clean filters maintain adequate airflow and reduce moisture retention on the evaporator coil.
Run the system on fan-only mode for 15 minutes before switching off. This dries the evaporator coil surface and significantly reduces residual moisture — the key driver of mould establishment during idle periods.
Book a professional service annually before summer. Pre-summer servicing — coil cleaning, drain treatment, and blower wheel cleaning — is the single most effective step for preventing mould from re-establishing.
Act on any musty smell immediately. A returning smell means mould is re-establishing early. Addressing it promptly prevents a small colony from becoming a larger problem before the next scheduled service.
Conclusion
Mould inside an air conditioner is not a minor inconvenience. It is an active health exposure that affects everyone in your home every time the system runs — with no obvious visual warning until the contamination is already well-established.
For Perth homeowners, the combination of long, intensive summer operation, dry autumn conditions, and Perth’s fine organic dust load creates a mould risk that is measurably higher than most other Australian cities. Recognising the early warning signs and acting on them promptly is what protects your family and prevents a manageable maintenance issue from becoming a serious health and remediation problem.
Air Cool Care services residential and commercial AC systems across Perth — from Joondalup to Rockingham, from the coast through to Armadale and the hills. Our technicians work to Australian standard AS/NZS 3666, hold the required professional certifications, and give honest, evidence-based assessments. If you are concerned about mould in your AC system, contact Air Cool Care today.
If you or a family member are experiencing health symptoms you believe may be related to indoor air quality, consult your GP in addition to addressing the source.