Two of the most commonly misunderstood property contamination problems are serious mould infestations and biohazard situations. Homeowners, tenants, and property managers frequently conflate the two — or, equally problematically, assume that a situation is one when it is actually the other. The distinction matters for three critical reasons: your health, your legal obligations, and the appropriate remediation approach.
What Is Mould?
Mould is a type of fungus that grows in multicellular filaments and reproduces via spores. It thrives in environments with moisture, warmth, and organic material to feed on. In properties, mould most commonly appears on walls, ceilings, window frames, bathroom grout, and behind furniture in poorly ventilated rooms.
Common property moulds include:
- Cladosporium — typically green or black; often found on fabrics and soft furnishings
- Penicillium — blue-green; frequently found on damp walls and insulation
- Aspergillus — multiple colours; can be opportunistically pathogenic in immunocompromised individuals
- Stachybotrys chartarum — commonly called "black mould"; associated with prolonged water damage and can produce mycotoxins
Most household mould is a health nuisance rather than an acute health crisis. However, extensive infestations — particularly of Stachybotrys — warrant professional remediation rather than DIY treatment.
What Is a Biohazard?
A biohazard is a biological substance or condition that poses a direct risk to human health. In a property context, biohazard situations arise from:
- Human blood or bodily fluids (from injury, trauma, or death)
- Decomposition following an unattended or undiscovered death
- Human or animal waste in circumstances that create infection risk
- Needle contamination from drug use
- Sewage backup involving untreated human waste
The key distinction from mould is the nature of the health threat: biohazards typically involve pathogenic microorganisms — bacteria and viruses that can cause serious or fatal illness — rather than fungal spores.
Key Differences
While both mould and biohazards represent contamination problems requiring professional attention, they differ significantly in cause, risk profile, and remediation approach:
- Origin: Mould grows from fungal spores in damp conditions. Biohazards arise from biological material — principally human or animal waste, blood, and decomposition.
- Visibility: Mould is typically visible (though it can grow behind surfaces). Biohazard contamination is frequently invisible — bloodborne pathogens are not visible to the naked eye.
- Persistence: Mould requires ongoing moisture to survive and grows over weeks and months. Biohazard contaminants such as hepatitis B can remain viable on dry surfaces for up to 7 days.
- Regulatory framework: Biohazard remediation falls under clinical and hazardous waste legislation. Mould remediation does not, though it has implications under housing law and landlord obligations.
Health Risks Compared
Both present genuine health risks, but of very different kinds:
Mould health risks include respiratory irritation, exacerbation of asthma and allergies, and in rare cases — particularly with extended Aspergillus exposure in immunocompromised individuals — serious fungal infections. Children, the elderly, and those with respiratory conditions are most vulnerable.
Biohazard health risks are more acute and immediate. Direct or indirect contact with contaminated blood or bodily fluids can result in transmission of bloodborne viruses including hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and HIV. Decomposition residue can harbour bacteria including Clostridium difficile and Staphylococcus aureus. These risks are present even when contamination appears superficially clean.
Do not attempt to clean a biohazard scene without professional training and appropriate PPE. The risks from direct contact with contaminated biological material are serious and well-documented. This applies regardless of how minor the apparent contamination appears.
Which Requires Professional Intervention?
Both can require professional intervention, but for different reasons:
Mould: Small areas of surface mould (less than 1m² on a single surface) can often be addressed by a competent DIYer using appropriate products and protective equipment. Larger infestations, or any mould that has penetrated walls or structural elements, should be professionally assessed and remediated. Recurring mould that returns after treatment usually indicates an underlying damp or structural problem.
Biohazards: Any biohazard situation involving blood, bodily fluids, decomposition, or sewage should always be handled by a professional specialist cleaning company. There is no safe DIY threshold for biohazard remediation. This is a legal requirement where the contamination is classified as clinical or hazardous waste.
The Legal Implications for Landlords and Property Managers
Both mould and biohazard situations carry legal implications for those responsible for a property:
- Landlords have a legal duty to maintain properties in a condition fit for habitation under the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018. Serious mould infestations and known biohazard contamination both fall within scope of this duty.
- Employers and facilities managers have obligations under COSHH (Control of Substances Hazardous to Health) regulations to protect employees from exposure to biological hazards in the workplace.
- Waste disposal from biohazard situations must comply with the Hazardous Waste Regulations — unlicensed disposal is a criminal offence.
If you are managing a property where either type of contamination has occurred, professional assessment and documentation provide you with evidence of compliance with your legal duty of care.
Our team covers Newcastle and the North East and can attend for an assessment and quotation at short notice. Call us to discuss your situation confidentially.