Regulated by The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, P.O. Box 12157, Austin, Texas 78711,
1-800-803-9202, 512-463-6599, www.tdlr.texas.gov

Fox Field Desk
What Rising Moisture Means for Indoor Air Quality
In Houston, summer doesn’t arrive quietly. It settles into the air.
As temperatures rise, humidity follows close behind — and what changes outside often changes indoors too.
Homes may look perfectly fine while moisture quietly shifts conditions behind the scenes. Air can feel heavier. Certain rooms begin holding humidity. Areas with limited airflow sometimes tell the story first.
This is where air quality becomes worth paying attention to.
Indoor air testing offers something helpful in a season of uncertainty: information. Rather than relying on appearance or smell alone, testing helps reveal what’s actually present in the air and whether conditions may be changing.
For homeowners and buyers alike, June is a reminder that what you can’t see sometimes matters just as much as what you can.