May 1, 2026
What are typical mold remediation profit margins? Mold remediation gross margins should run 55–65% on properly scoped and priced work. Companies consistently running below 45% typically have scope underestimation, containment cost overruns, or subcontractor dependencies that erode margin. The service is inherently high-margin when executed with cost discipline.
Mold remediation is a specialty service that commands premium pricing — customers pay for expertise, certification, and the assurance that the job is done correctly. The gross margin potential is exceptional. Yet most restoration companies that offer mold remediation run margins below what the service should produce. Here’s the diagnostic.
Mold scope is often larger than what’s visible. Mold behind drywall, inside wall cavities, in subfloor assemblies, and in HVAC systems is invisible at the time of initial assessment. Scopes written before exploratory demolition consistently miss containment and remediation extent — and mid-job scope additions are harder to collect than initial estimates.
The fix: Build phased scope protocols that explicitly flag exploratory demolition as a required first step before final scope commitment. Charge for the exploratory phase. Set adjuster and customer expectations upfront that initial scope is provisional.
Proper mold containment — critical barriers, negative air pressure, decontamination chambers — is expensive in labor and materials. Companies that underprice containment to win jobs then discover the actual cost during execution. Every hour of containment setup and teardown that isn’t priced correctly is margin erosion.
Many states require or customers demand third-party clearance testing, which is controlled by an industrial hygienist the company doesn’t employ. When clearance testing delays job close — because the IH isn’t available for two days, or because the first clearance test fails — those delay costs come out of margin.
Companies that subcontract mold remediation work pay 50–70 cents of every dollar to the subcontractor while bearing the client relationship, overhead, and liability. The margin on pass-through work is structurally limited.
To recover mold remediation margin, companies need to: (1) build phased scope protocols with exploratory allowances, (2) cost-engineer containment setups by job type and size, (3) develop preferred IH relationships that provide reliable clearance timing, and (4) bring remediation in-house with certified technicians rather than subcontracting.
IICRC AMRT (Applied Microbial Remediation Technician) is the industry standard certification for mold remediation technicians. Many states have additional licensing requirements. Some states require a separate mold remediation contractor license distinct from a general contractor license.
A mold clearance test is a post-remediation air quality or surface sample test conducted by an independent industrial hygienist to verify that mold levels have been reduced to acceptable background levels following remediation. Clearance testing is required in some states and recommended as standard practice in most professional remediation work.
Mike McCabe is The Profit Detective — a 36-year restoration industry veteran and Master Restorer who has diagnosed mold remediation margin problems for restoration companies across North America.
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