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Mold Remediation in Pensacola, FL

Mold in Pensacola is rarely a one-off accident — inland Central Florida humidity and AC-condensation problems keep it coming back unless the moisture source is fixed. The upside: this is one of the best-supplied markets in the state, with 60 verified companies across Escambia, Santa Rosa counties, including 16 independent assessors who legally cannot sell you the remediation. A typical job here runs $1,000–$3,775; the full local table is below.

Mold remediation in Pensacola, FL typically costs $1,000–$3,775 (median $2,075). Florida requires a state license for any job over 10 sq ft. 60 license- or cert-verified companies serve the Pensacola area — each checked against the state registry, with the verification date shown.

Verified mold remediation companies in Pensacola

Showing 30 of 60 verified in the area — each license checked against the state registry.

You pick who calls. We never sell or blast your number — one call goes to one company you choose.

30 results

ARSUAGA, PETER DEAN

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSR3575· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)

BARKSDALE, JOHN D

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA117· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor

BEASLEY, ADAM P

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA3243· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor

BLACKWELL, RYAN LEE

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSR1287· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)

BLEICH, RYAN BRUCE

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA5136· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)

BONHAM, ROBERT EDWARD

GULF BREEZE, FL

License #MRSA5014· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)
License #MRSA1175· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)
License #MRSA2141· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor
License #MRSA3826· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)
License #MRSR172· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)
License #MRSA2612· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor

CORREA, WILFREDO

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA5528· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor
License #MRSR5421· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict

DAVID, RYAN PAUL

NAVARRE, FL

License #MRSR4232· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict

DYE, CHRISTINA

NAVARRE, FL

License #MRSA4359· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor
License #MRSR3468· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict
License #MRSR1053· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict

FARMER, CRAIG W

NAVARRE, FL

License #MRSA3413· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Independent assessor

FOSTER, KEVIN L

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA5683· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)

FULLER, SEAN WAYNE

PENSACOLA, FL

License #MRSA2432· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Assessor + remediator (disclosed)

GAILEY, EDWARD SAMUEL

GULF BREEZE, FL

License #MRSR1975· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict
License #MRSR2770· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict
License #MRSR4959· Active · Verified Jun 2026 · FL DBPR
What does this license mean?

MRSR is the Florida state mold remediation license — required to do the actual removal on any job larger than about 10 square feet. MRSA is the separate assessor (testing) license. State law keeps the two roles independent so the company that finds the mold isn't the one that profits from removing it.

Remediation only — no assessment conflict

+ 30 more verified companies in this area.

The Pensacola market by the numbers (verified against the FL DBPR registry and certification bodies):
• 60 total verified companies within 32 miles
• 17 licensed remediators (MRSR) · 16 independent assessors (MRSA) · 27 firms licensed for both (legally barred from doing both on the same property within 12 months)
• 0 hold voluntary IICRC certification on top of their license · 2 are certified-only firms
• Primary counties: Escambia · Santa Rosa

What mold work costs in Pensacola (2026)

ScenarioLow (25th %)Typical (median)High (75th %)
Typical remediation job$1,000$2,075$3,775
Bathroom$450$1,000$1,975
Basement / crawlspace$800$1,900$4,050
Attic$1,075$2,525$5,400
HVAC / ductwork$1,800$3,600$8,550
After a flood or major leak$2,250$4,950$10,800
Independent inspection + testing$225$400$625

Source: MoldVerified cost corpus — national datasets adjusted for the local market. Data refreshed 2026-06-03.

Why Pensacola homes grow mold

Pensacola anchors the western panhandle, where Gulf humidity, heavy rainfall, and a long hurricane exposure (the area has taken repeated direct hits) drive a moisture load as serious as anywhere in the state. Escambia and Santa Rosa County housing skews older — brick, frame, and slab homes from the mid-century Navy-town boom — with the kind of envelopes and crawl spaces that hold water once it gets in.

Post-storm, the same out-of-state unlicensed crews appear here as in South Florida. The protection is unchanged: use an independent licensed assessor, keep assessment and remediation separate, and check each license on the registry — every listing below links to its record.

What to expect

  1. 1

    Independent inspection & testing

    A licensed assessor maps how far the mold has spread and takes air or surface samples. In Florida this assessor legally can't be the company that does the removal, so the findings have no upsell behind them.

  2. 2

    Containment

    The work area is sealed off with plastic sheeting and put under negative air pressure, so spores disturbed during removal can't drift into the rest of the home.

  3. 3

    Removal of contaminated porous material

    Drywall, insulation, carpet, and other porous materials the mold has grown into are cut out and bagged. Hard, non-porous surfaces are cleaned in place; porous ones can't be reliably saved.

  4. 4

    Drying & HEPA air scrubbing

    HEPA-filtered scrubbers and dehumidifiers run until the area is dry and the air is clear. This step, plus fixing the original moisture source, is what keeps the mold from returning.

  5. 5

    Independent clearance test

    A party other than the remediator re-tests the air and surfaces to confirm the levels are back to normal. A passing clearance report is your proof the job actually worked — and the document a buyer or lender will ask for.

Do I have to move out?

Most homeowners stay put. A licensed crew seals off the work area, so the rest of the house stays usable while the job runs.

Plan to leave only if one of these is true:

  • the affected area is larger than about 30 square feet
  • the HVAC system is involved (it can move spores through the whole house)
  • someone in the home has asthma, is immunocompromised, or is pregnant

Re-entry is typically 24–48 hours after a passing independent clearance test. Ask your remediator for their containment plan and expected timeline up front — a clear answer is a good sign.

Common questions

What does mold removal cost in Pensacola?

Plan on $1,000–$3,775 for a typical job in the Pensacola market — the median sits near $2,075. The big cost drivers are contaminated area, porous materials (drywall has to come out, not get wiped), and whether the HVAC system is involved. Start with a $225–$625 independent inspection if the extent isn't obvious.

Does homeowners insurance cover mold remediation in Florida?

It depends on what caused it. Escambia County claims adjusters draw one line hard: sudden and accidental (burst pipe, water-heater failure) is generally covered; gradual (slow leak, humidity, deferred maintenance) generally isn't. Florida policies also commonly cap mold remediation at $10,000. Photograph everything before any cleanup — the documentation decides the claim.

Do I need a licensed mold remediator in Pensacola?

Yes, for anything over 10 square feet — Florida licenses this industry directly (MRSR for remediators, MRSA for assessors), which most states don't. Pensacola has 60 verified license-holders to choose from, so there's no reason to gamble on an unlicensed crew. Each card here links to the state's own registry record.

Can I remove the mold myself?

Honestly: often yes, if it's smaller than about 3×3 ft, sitting on tile/glass/metal rather than drywall, and the water source is fixed. Detergent, protection, ventilation — not bleach on porous materials. Bigger than that, or musty smell with no visible source, is when Pensacola's pros earn their fee. Our triage quiz sorts it in a minute.

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