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Parker, CO · Douglas County & the southeast Denver metro
Mold vs. Mildew: How to Tell the Difference
People use the words interchangeably, but they're not the same — and the difference changes how worried you should be.
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The key differences
Mildew
- Flat, powdery or fluffy
- White, gray or yellowish
- Sits on the surface — wipes off
- Lower risk; mostly cosmetic and minor-health
Mold
- Fuzzy or slimy texture
- Green, black or other dark colors
- Penetrates into the material
- Health and structural risk — needs remediation
What about that chalky white stuff?
If you see a chalky, crystalline white deposit on basement or foundation walls, that's often efflorescence — mineral salt left behind as water evaporates, not a fungus at all. You can't grow it like mold, but it still flags a moisture problem worth tracing.
A simple bleach-dab test
Dab a little diluted bleach on the spot. If it lightens after a minute or two, it's likely mildew sitting on the surface. If it stays dark, you're probably looking at mold that has penetrated the material — and that calls for a closer look.
Mold vs mildew FAQs
Is mildew dangerous like mold?
Mildew is generally lower-risk — more of a cosmetic and minor-irritant nuisance. Mold penetrates materials and carries greater health and structural risk.
How can I tell them apart quickly?
Mildew is flat, powdery and light-colored and wipes off; mold is fuzzy or slimy, darker, and grows into the surface. A bleach-dab test helps confirm.
What is efflorescence?
A chalky white mineral salt deposit left by evaporating water on masonry. It isn't mold, but it signals moisture you should address.
Can mildew turn into mold?
Mildew won't "become" mold, but the same damp conditions that allow mildew can also support mold. Fixing the moisture handles both.
Not sure which one you have?
A quick look settles it. Call (720) 545-0682 for a Parker assessment.
Call (720) 545-0682