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Hurricane & Flood Mold Aftermath in Maine

What to do in the first 48 hours after a Maine hurricane or flood: the 24-72 hour drying window, what to discard vs save, and how to document for insurance.

Updated April 29, 2026·7 min read·By the MoldInspectorsNearMe editorial team

Hurricane and flood damage in Maine creates a hard 24-72 hour window before mold becomes the dominant problem. Here's what to do hour by hour, what to document, and how Maine's specific exposure shapes the response.

The 24-72 hour rule (Maine edition)

If your Maine home is flooded -- by hurricane, tropical storm, or storm surge -- mold growth begins within 24-48 hours. By 72 hours, visible colonies are routine on cellulose-based materials (drywall paper, wood, fabric, paper-faced insulation).

That window is the dominant constraint on post-storm remediation. Everything else flows from it.

If you can't dry it within 72 hours, plan to remove it.

Materials that stay wet beyond 72 hours -- carpet, padding, drywall, insulation, ceiling tiles -- almost always need to be removed regardless of whether visible mold has appeared yet. Trying to dry-in-place wet drywall is one of the most common causes of catastrophic hidden mold a year later.

Maine context: Hurricane / post-tropical cyclone Lee (2023) and historical Hurricane Bob (1991). ME's exposure is lower frequency but coastal homes face significant nor'easter risk.

What to do in the first 48 hours

  1. Document FIRST. Photograph every room, every wet surface, every standing-water mark, before you remove anything. Insurance claims hinge on this.
  2. Cut the power to flooded circuits at the breaker if water reached outlets. Don't enter standing water if power is on.
  3. File the claim immediately. Most policies have prompt-notice clauses that can void coverage if you delay.
  4. Pump or wet-vac standing water out of the home as fast as possible.
  5. Open windows + doors to ventilate (if outdoor humidity allows). Run fans and dehumidifiers continuously.
  6. Pull up and discard wet carpet and pad. They cannot be saved after a flood.
  7. Cut wet drywall 1-2 feet above the high-water line and remove it. The drywall paper above the cut is dry and stays.
  8. Discard wet insulation, ceiling tiles, paper-backed wall coverings, and any porous material that can't be cleaned.

Tip: In Maine, post-storm scheduling for mold inspectors typically runs 2-4 weeks behind. Book the assessment as soon as possible -- even if the visit is weeks out, you've reserved a spot in the queue.

Days 3-14: drying and the hidden-mold window

Once the bulk water is out and the wet porous materials are removed, the focus shifts to drying the remaining structure to safe moisture levels and watching for hidden problems.

  • Run dehumidifiers and air movers continuously. Rent commercial-grade equipment if available; consumer dehumidifiers won't keep up.
  • Track moisture content in wood framing with a meter. Target: under 16% moisture content for dimensional lumber.
  • Inspect wall cavities once drywall is removed. Look for stained or wet sheathing, sill plate, or rim joist.
  • Watch for the musty smell as a 'something's still wet' indicator. If it's there a week into drying, get an inspection.
  • Don't reinstall finished materials until everything reads dry. Closing up wet framing is a recipe for hidden mold.
When to bring in a professional

In Maine, hire a mold inspector if: (1) the flood was deeper than a few inches, (2) the property sat wet more than 72 hours before drying started, (3) you're in a multi-unit building where neighbouring units may have been wet, or (4) sensitive occupants (children, elderly, immunocompromised) live there.

Insurance: the dominant post-storm decision

Mold remediation after a hurricane is almost always tied up with the broader insurance claim. The single most consequential thing you can do in the first 48 hours is establish proper documentation.

  • Wind damage that admits water (roof, windows, etc.) is typically covered under standard homeowner policies.
  • Flood damage from rising water is NOT covered under standard homeowners. It requires separate flood insurance (NFIP or private).
  • Storm surge is treated as flood, not wind, by virtually all carriers. This was the central dispute in post-Katrina, post-Sandy, and post-Ian claims.
  • Mold sub-limits ($5,000-$10,000 typical) often apply even when the underlying water source is covered.
  • An INDEPENDENT mold inspector's report is the most valuable document in a contested claim.

Read your Maine policy carefully -- mold sub-limits and hurricane / windstorm deductibles can be much higher than your all-perils deductible.

Maine-specific watch points

Maine's combination of coastal exposure and high-humidity climate means post-storm drying is challenging. Plan for slower drying than equipment specs suggest, and budget for longer remediation timelines than dryer-climate states.

Frequently asked questions

Sources & references

  1. FEMA: Dealing with Mold & Mildew in Your Flood Damaged Home Federal Emergency Management Agency
  2. EPA: Flood Cleanup -- Avoiding Indoor Air Quality Problems U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  3. CDC: Recommendations for Cleaning Up After a Flood U.S. Centers for Disease Control
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