We Found Mold Behind Every Wall — A Toronto Homeowner's $22K Nightmare
·4 min read
L
Lisa NguyenGeneral Contractor & Renovation Specialist
Published March 21, 2026
Key Takeaway
A Toronto family paid $890K for a renovated home and spent 6 months living in mold. The $22K fix and the 2-year-old whose cough finally stopped.
The listing hit all the right notes. Fully renovated semi-detached on Coxwell Ave, East York. All-new kitchen. Updated bathrooms. Finished basement. $890,000.
Deepa and Ravi had been searching for eight months. When they walked through in March 2024, it looked exactly like what they''d been chasing. They got it.
By September, their two-year-old daughter Priya was on her third round of antibiotics.
The Cough That Wouldn''t Quit
Three months after moving in, Priya developed a persistent cough. The pediatrician blamed daycare. Upper respiratory, probably viral, let it run its course. It ran its course. Then it came back.
By August, Deepa was getting daily headaches. Ravi noticed a musty smell in the basement that wouldn''t go away despite cleaning, dehumidifiers, and moisture absorbers.
A colleague asked one question: Have you had your air tested?
$450 for an Answer
The air quality test cost $450. Results: elevated Aspergillus and Penicillium spore counts in the basement and main floor.
"Investigation behind finished surfaces is strongly recommended."
They called a mold remediation company the next morning.
The First Wall
They opened the basement wall on a Friday afternoon. Behind the brand-new drywall and fresh paint: black mold covering the entire stud. Stachybotrys chartarum. Growing on original framing.
The previous owner hadn''t remediated. They''d drywalled over it. Built new walls two inches in front of the old ones. A box around the mold.
They Opened More Walls
Behind the basement bathroom: mold on the framing behind the tub surround.
Licensed General Contractor, LEED Green Associate, 14+ years experience
Lisa Nguyen is a licensed general contractor and LEED Green Associate with 14 years of experience managing residential renovation and remodeling projects. She brings expertise in kitchen and bathroom remodels, basement finishing, and sustainable building practices.
Behind the powder room: another colony. Window frame rot.
Every "renovated" space had been covered up, not fixed.
"This wasn''t a renovation," Deepa said. "It was a staging job. They renovated over problems."
$22,400
Every affected wall opened. Contaminated drywall removed. Framing treated — HEPA vacuuming, antimicrobial application, encapsulation. Insulation replaced. Foundation crack sealed ($3,200). Structural engineer sign-off. Then rebuild.
Total: $22,400. Six months after buying an $890,000 house.
"We paid $890,000 for a house that was making our daughter sick."
The Paper Trail Goes Cold
Ravi called the previous owner''s agent. She said she''d call back. She never did. Demand letter sent — previous owner couldn''t be located. The property disclosure had checked "no known moisture or mold problems."
Their lawyer said they probably had a case. But pursuing it would cost money they didn''t have, with no guarantee of collecting. They were exhausted. They had a sick kid. They paid and moved on.
Two Weeks Later
Priya''s cough stopped fourteen days after remediation completed. Not gradually. Just stopped. She slept through the night without coughing. Then again. And again.
She''d been coughing for almost six months. Two courses of antibiotics. Everyone said daycare, seasonal, normal toddler stuff.
It was the house. She was breathing mold spores in her bedroom every night for six months.
Deepa''s headaches stopped within a week.
What the Inspector Missed
The home inspector flagged one thing: a hairline foundation crack. "Minor, common, monitor." He didn''t flag the smell. He noted the "recent renovation" as a positive.
Standard inspections are visual. Inspectors don''t open walls or test air quality. If renovation looks clean and new, that''s what they report.
"Nobody told us a home inspection has limits," Ravi said. "Nobody said: if a house has been heavily renovated before listing, do an air quality test too."
The House Is Theirs Now
They kept it. The mold is gone. Follow-up air test: all normal. Priya turns three next month. No respiratory issues since October.
"The house is ours now. Really ours. Not the cover-up version. The actual house."
If you''re buying a renovated home, consider a $400-500 air quality test — especially for older homes with recent cosmetic work. It''s the cheapest insurance against what Deepa and Ravi went through.
GetAHomePro connects you with certified mold remediation contractors across Ontario.
FAQ
Can a home inspection catch hidden mold?
Standard inspections are visual only — inspectors don''t open walls or test air. An air quality test ($400-500) catches what inspections miss.
Is the seller liable for hiding mold?
If they knowingly covered it and checked "no known issues" on the disclosure, yes — but proving knowledge and collecting damages is difficult and expensive.
How long does mold remediation take?
Depends on scope. A single room: 3-5 days. Whole-house like this case: 2-3 weeks.
Will my insurance cover mold?
Only if the mold resulted from a sudden covered event (burst pipe). Pre-existing mold from a purchase = not covered.
How do I know if my renovated home has hidden mold?
Warning signs: persistent musty smell, unexplained respiratory symptoms, recent cosmetic renovation on an older home, visible foundation cracks. An air quality test provides answers.