Coughing, sneezing and itchy eyes often happen with this common allergy. Find out how to treat and help manage this condition.
Update Date: 11.08.2025
If you have a mold allergy, your immune system is overly sensitive to mold spores. A mold allergy can cause coughing, itchy eyes and other symptoms that make you uncomfortable. In some people, a mold allergy is linked to asthma. If mold allergy is linked to asthma, mold exposure can cause restricted breathing and other airway symptoms.
If you have a mold allergy, the best defense is to reduce your exposure to the types of mold that cause your reaction. Medicines can help keep manage mold allergy reactions.
A mold allergy causes the same symptoms that happen in other types of upper respiratory allergies, such as hay fever. Symptoms caused by a mold allergy can include:
Mold allergy symptoms vary from person to person and range from mild to severe. You might have year-round symptoms or symptoms that flare up only during certain times of the year. You might notice symptoms when the weather is damp or when you're in indoor or outdoor spaces that have high concentrations of mold.
If you have a mold allergy and asthma, your asthma symptoms can be triggered by exposure to mold spores. In some people, exposure to certain molds can cause a severe asthma attack. Symptoms of asthma include:
If you have a stuffy nose, sneezing, watery eyes, shortness of breath, wheezing or other bothersome symptoms that persist, see a healthcare professional.
Like any allergy, mold allergy symptoms are triggered by an overly sensitive immune system response. When you inhale tiny airborne mold spores, your body recognizes them as foreign invaders and develops allergy-causing antibodies to fight them.
Exposure to mold spores can cause a reaction right away, or the reaction can be delayed.
Various molds are common indoors and outdoors. Only certain kinds of mold cause allergies. Being allergic to one type of mold doesn't mean you'll be allergic to another. Some of the most common molds that cause allergies include mildew, alternaria, aspergillus, cladosporium and penicillium.
A number of factors can make someone more likely to develop a mold allergy or make mold allergy symptoms worse, including:
Living in a home with high humidity. Having indoor humidity higher than 50% can increase mold in your home.
Mold can grow virtually anywhere if the conditions are right — in basements, behind walls in framing, on soap-coated grout and other damp surfaces, in carpet pads, and in carpet itself. Exposure to high levels of household mold can trigger mold allergy symptoms.
Most allergic responses to mold involve hay fever-type symptoms that can make you miserable but aren't serious. However, certain allergic conditions caused by mold are more serious. These include:
Besides causing allergies, mold can pose other health risks to susceptible people. For example, mold can cause infections of the skin or mucous membranes. Generally, however, mold doesn't cause infections throughout the whole body in most people. Exceptions include people with weakened immune systems or ongoing lung conditions.
To reduce mold growth in your home, follow these tips:
Besides considering symptoms, a healthcare professional might do a physical exam to look for or rule out other medical conditions. Tests used to diagnose an allergy include:
The best way to manage an allergy is to avoid exposure to triggers. However, molds are common and you can't completely avoid them.
While there's no sure way to cure symptoms caused by a mold allergy, several medicines can ease them. These include:
Nasal corticosteroids. These nasal sprays help prevent and treat the inflammation caused by an upper respiratory mold allergy. For many people, they're the most effective allergy medicines, and they're often the first medicines recommended.
Examples include ciclesonide (Omnaris), fluticasone (Flonase Allergy Relief, Xhance), mometasone (Nasonex 24HR Allergy), triamcinolone (Nasacort Allergy 24 Hour) and budesonide (Rhinocort). Nosebleeds and nasal dryness are the most common side effects of these medicines, which are generally safe for long-term use.
Antihistamines. These medicines can help with itching, sneezing and runny nose. They work by blocking histamine, an inflammatory chemical released by the immune system during an allergic reaction.
Antihistamines that you can buy without a prescription include loratadine (Alavert, Claritin), fexofenadine (Allegra Allergy) and cetirizine (Zyrtec Allergy). They cause little to no drowsiness or dry mouth.
The antihistamine nasal spray olopatadine is available by prescription. Azelastine is another antihistamine nasal spray and is available without a prescription (Astepro Allergy). Side effects of the nasal sprays can include a bitter taste in your mouth and nasal dryness.
Other treatments for mold allergy include:
Nasal lavage. To help with irritating nasal symptoms, a healthcare professional might recommend that you rinse your nose daily with salt water. This home remedy, called nasal lavage, can help keep your nose free of irritants. Use a specially designed squeeze bottle — such as the one included in saline kits (Sinus Rinse, others) — a rubber-bulb syringe or a neti pot to irrigate your nasal passages.
Use water that's distilled, sterile, previously boiled and cooled, or filtered using a filter with an absolute pore size of 1 micron or smaller to make up the irrigation solution. Be sure to rinse the irrigation device after each use with similarly distilled, sterile, previously boiled and cooled, or filtered water and leave it open to air-dry.
To keep mold allergy symptoms at bay, take these measures:
Many people are diagnosed and treated for allergies by their primary healthcare professional. However, depending on how bad your allergies are, your health professional might refer you to a doctor who specializes in treating allergies.
Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment.
For a mold allergy, some questions you might want to ask include:
Your healthcare professional is likely to ask you questions, such as:
While you're waiting to see your doctor, there are numerous nonprescription allergy medicines that may ease your symptoms.
If you have visible mold in your home, have someone who's not allergic to mold clean the area using a commercially available mold-cleaning product or a solution of 1 cup (250 milliliters) of bleach to 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of water. If you have to clean up the mold yourself, be sure to wear long rubber gloves, safety goggles and a mask to limit your exposure to the mold.
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