# How to Prevent Mould on Furniture in Singapore

**By Megafurniture Admin** · 2026-06-03

![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/wooden-furniture-humidity-mould-care_ba427dae-6efa-4cab-a3a6-4090808a3c0f.png?v=1780480860)  
Mould on furniture in Singapore is caused by high humidity settling into upholstery, timber, and foam. Preventing it means keeping indoor relative humidity between 55% and 65%, ensuring consistent airflow around and beneath every piece, cleaning spills within minutes, and choosing materials suited to the climate.

For fabric-upholstered pieces, a dehumidifier running at night makes a measurable difference. For leather, a light conditioning wipe every few months helps seal the surface against moisture intrusion.

Singapore’s average relative humidity sits between 70% and 85% for most of the year. That is not a background condition to work around. It is the central fact of furniture ownership here.

Mould does not need a leak or a flood to take hold. It needs warmth, stillness, and moisture at or above 70% relative humidity, conditions that a Singapore flat provides naturally every night the air conditioning is switched off or the windows are left open in the rain.

For first-home buyers in particular, mould on a new sofa or bed frame is a disheartening discovery, and an avoidable one. The prevention is not complicated, but it does require a few consistent habits and, in some cases, a more considered approach to which materials you bring into the home in the first place.

## What to Know Before You Start

Mould spores are present in every Singapore home. The question is not whether they exist, but whether the conditions allow them to colonise.

Four factors determine that: humidity, temperature, airflow, and the surface material. Furniture made with untreated timber, open-cell foam, or loosely woven fabric gives mould more purchase than furniture built with denser, more resistant materials.

The furniture most at risk in a Singapore home is typically a fabric sofa pushed against a wall with little airflow behind it, a timber bed frame on a low platform with no clearance underneath, and any upholstered piece in a room that stays closed during the day.

Leather is more resistant than fabric, but it is not immune. Dense, high-resilience foam at 35 kg/m³ or above resists moisture absorption better than softer, lower-density fills, which is one of the less-discussed reasons foam density matters beyond seating comfort.

What you will need to work through the steps below:

-   A hygrometer
-   A dehumidifier suited to the room size
-   A diluted white vinegar solution or commercial anti-mould fabric spray
-   A soft-bristled brush
-   A microfibre cloth
-   A furniture-appropriate wood conditioner or wax for timber surfaces
-   A pH-neutral leather conditioner for leather

## Step 1: Measure the Humidity in Each Room

Place a hygrometer in every room where upholstered or timber furniture lives. Do this for at least three days, noting the readings morning, midday, and night.

The readings at night, when air conditioning is off and windows are closed, are the ones that matter most. If any room consistently reads above 70% relative humidity, that room has a mould risk. Above 75%, the risk is active.

The target range for a Singapore home is 55% to 65%. Most rooms will not reach this without active management.

Knowing the baseline number tells you where to concentrate effort and whether a dehumidifier is a useful tool or an essential one.

## Step 2: Improve Airflow Around Every Piece

Mould colonises where air is still. A sofa placed flush against a wall traps a pocket of humid air between the upholstery and the paint, and that pocket is where the problem begins.

Pull every upholstered piece at least five to eight centimetres away from the wall. It is a small adjustment, and one that makes a real difference.

Bed frames on solid platform bases with no clearance underneath face the same issue. If the base sits directly on the floor, the underside of the mattress and the top of the platform hold moisture with no way for it to escape.

A frame with legs, or a slatted base that allows air to move, holds its condition far longer.

On days when the weather is dry and the humidity drops below 65%, open the windows and let the air move through the room for at least an hour. This is one of the simplest and most consistently overlooked steps in Singapore humidity management.

## Step 3: Run a Dehumidifier in High-Risk Rooms

A dehumidifier is the single most effective intervention in a high-humidity Singapore bedroom or living room. Set it to maintain 60% relative humidity and run it during the hours when air conditioning is off.

For a standard HDB bedroom of around 10 to 12 square metres, a dehumidifier rated at 10 to 12 litres per day is generally sufficient. For larger living rooms, a 16 to 20 litre capacity unit is more appropriate.

The cost of running a dehumidifier is real, approximately SGD 20 to SGD 40 per month depending on the unit and usage hours, but it is considerably less than the cost of replacing a mould-damaged sofa or mattress.

Think of it as part of the maintenance cost of owning good furniture in this climate.

## Step 4: Clean Spills and Moisture Immediately

On a weeknight, a glass of water tips over on the sofa. The instinct is to blot, check it looks dry, and move on. The problem is that liquid penetrates upholstery quickly, reaching the foam beneath, and foam that wets and dries slowly is exactly where mould begins.

Blot the surface immediately with an absorbent cloth, then press a dry towel firmly into the area and hold it for sixty seconds to draw moisture from deeper in the cushion.

If the sofa is near a window or a fan, direct airflow onto the damp area for at least thirty minutes.

For timber surfaces, wipe standing water within a few minutes. Timber that repeatedly absorbs and dries moisture will eventually crack and check, giving mould a foothold in the grain.

## Step 5: Apply a Preventive Treatment by Material

### Fabric Upholstery

Every three to four months, apply a fabric protector spray rated for upholstery. These sprays create a light barrier that slows moisture absorption without changing the hand of the fabric.

Before applying, brush the surface lightly with a soft-bristled brush to lift dust and debris from the weave. Allow the piece to dry fully in a well-ventilated room before use.

Performance fabric, particularly tightly woven microfibre blends, is inherently more resistant to moisture than loosely woven linen or cotton. This is one of the practical arguments for choosing it in a Singapore home regardless of aesthetic preference.

### Leather Upholstery

Leather resists surface moisture well, but it is not impervious. Condition top-grain leather every three to four months with a pH-neutral leather conditioner.

The conditioner keeps the hide supple and seals the grain against moisture penetration.

In a Singapore room, leather that goes unconditioned for over a year will begin to dry at the surface despite the ambient humidity. That seems counterintuitive, but it reflects the way moisture in humid air interacts differently with hide than direct liquid contact does.

### Timber Frames and Surfaces

Kiln-dried hardwood holds its geometry and resists moisture uptake better than timber dried at lower temperatures, which is one of the reasons Esteller’s furniture is built on kiln-dried hardwood frames.

Even so, exposed timber surfaces benefit from a wax or wood conditioner applied twice a year. Pay particular attention to the underside of table tops and the inner faces of cabinet sides, areas that are rarely wiped but are exposed to ambient humidity continuously.

## Step 6: Address Mould at the First Sign

If a faint musty smell develops, or a small grey-green patch appears on a cushion or timber surface, act within twenty-four hours.

For fabric, mix one part white vinegar with two parts water, spray lightly onto the affected area, and allow it to sit for ten minutes before blotting clean with a microfibre cloth. Do not saturate the fabric.

Repeat once if the patch persists, then allow the piece to dry fully in front of a fan or in an air-conditioned room.

For timber, a diluted vinegar solution applied with a cloth and wiped dry within a minute works well on surface mould.

For leather, a specialist leather cleaner rated for mould or mildew is safer than vinegar, which can dry the hide if overused.

Small patches caught early are a maintenance issue. Patches that return after treatment, or that cover more than a palm-sized area, point to a deeper moisture problem in the foam, the frame, or the room itself.

## ![](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0652/0212/6896/files/singapore-fabric-sofa-mould-prevention_df6f9e2a-d08f-4536-ba94-5867ad51a66b.png?v=1780480861)  
Common Mistakes That Make Mould Worse

-   Relying on air conditioning alone: Air conditioning cools the air and reduces humidity while it runs, but when it is switched off overnight, humidity recovers quickly. A dehumidifier maintains the level continuously.
-   Pushing furniture against the wall: This is the most common placement mistake in smaller living rooms. Five centimetres of clearance matters more than most people expect.
-   Using excess water when cleaning: Wet-wiping fabric upholstery or soaking a timber surface introduces more moisture than the mould it was meant to treat. Damp, not wet, is the rule for every material.
-   Ignoring the underside of cushions: Removable seat cushions should be flipped every two weeks. The underside, pressed against the sofa base, gets no airflow and is often the first place mould colonises in a humid room.
-   Choosing materials for appearance only: A loosely woven linen sofa reads beautifully in a Singapore flat, but it holds moisture longer than performance fabric and requires more active maintenance in this climate. The material choice is a maintenance commitment, not just an aesthetic one.

## When the Problem Is Bigger Than Maintenance

Honest advice: if mould returns on the same piece within a few weeks of treatment, the issue is not the furniture. It is the room.

A room with persistent condensation on windows, a wall that is cool to the touch on the interior face, or a floor plan that means no natural airflow reaches the space needs a structural intervention, a dehumidifier with more capacity, or in some cases a conversation with the building management about ventilation.

There is also a point at which a heavily mould-affected piece of furniture is no longer recoverable by surface treatment.

If the foam inside a sofa cushion has absorbed mould through its structure, the cushion needs replacing, not cleaning. A reputable upholsterer can replace individual cushion fills. Ask about foam density when they do, because 35 kg/m³ or above will hold its condition longer in this climate than a cheaper, lower-density fill.

If you are choosing new furniture and mould resilience is a genuine concern, the design team at Esteller’s Sembawang showroom can walk you through the specific material and construction options that perform well in Singapore conditions.

The 4.8 rating across 96 Google reviews reflects, in part, how the pieces hold up over years of actual use in homes like yours.

When the time comes to choose a new sofa, it is also worth reading through the [complete sofa buying guide for Singapore](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/best-sofas-in-singapore-your-complete-buying-guide), which covers material selection, configurations, and sizing in the context of local homes.

## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the best humidity level for furniture in Singapore?

Between 55% and 65% relative humidity. Above 70%, mould risk increases meaningfully. Above 75%, it becomes active on susceptible materials.

A hygrometer is the only reliable way to know what your rooms are actually running at, and it is a worthwhile SGD 20 to SGD 30 investment for any home with good furniture in it.

### Is leather or fabric more resistant to mould in Singapore?

Top-grain leather is more resistant to surface moisture than most fabric upholstery, because the dense, treated hide does not absorb ambient humidity the way open-weave fabrics do.

That said, leather still requires conditioning every few months to keep the surface sealed.

Among fabric options, tightly woven performance microfibre outperforms loosely woven linen or cotton in humidity resistance, and wipes clean far more easily after a spill.

### Can I use bleach to remove mould from a sofa?

No. Bleach will strip colour from fabric upholstery and dry out leather.

A diluted white vinegar solution, using one part vinegar to two parts water, is safe for most fabric upholstery and effective on surface mould.

For leather, use a specialist leather cleaner rated for mildew. Apply sparingly, blot rather than rub, and allow the piece to dry fully with good airflow before use.

### Does foam density affect how quickly mould forms inside a sofa?

It does. Lower-density foam, typically below 25 kg/m³, has a more open cell structure that absorbs moisture more readily and releases it more slowly.

High-resilience foam at 35 kg/m³ or above is denser, absorbs less moisture, and dries faster when it does get wet.

This is one of the practical reasons foam density is a specification that matters beyond seating comfort, particularly in Singapore’s climate.

### How often should I treat my furniture to prevent mould?

For fabric upholstery, apply a protective spray every three to four months, combined with regular cushion flipping every two weeks.

For leather, condition every three to four months. For timber surfaces, apply a wax or conditioner twice a year.

The specific frequency will depend on your room’s humidity levels and whether air conditioning or a dehumidifier is running consistently. Higher ambient humidity means more frequent attention.

## Choosing Furniture That Holds Its Condition

Prevention starts with the maintenance habits above. But it also starts earlier, at the point of choosing the furniture itself.

A piece built on a kiln-dried hardwood frame, upholstered in performance fabric or top-grain leather, with high-resilience foam at 35 kg/m³, enters a Singapore home with a structural advantage over a cheaper piece made with lower-grade materials.

The care that goes into the construction is what allows the piece to be maintained, rather than just replaced.

Esteller’s affordable luxury range, from approximately SGD 600 to SGD 2,500, is built to the same considered construction standard across every tier: kiln-dried hardwood frames, high-resilience foam, and transparent material specifications.

The three-year warranty across the full range is not marketing language. It is the construction’s way of expressing confidence that the piece is built to last in actual Singapore conditions.

A piece chosen with care, maintained consistently, and built to the right specification holds its character for a decade. That is the better calculation for a first home.

The collection is refreshed through the year, each new piece held to the same considered standard. Browse the [living room furniture collection](https://esteller.sg/collections/living-room-furniture) for current configurations, material specifications, and pricing.

Every piece carries the three-year warranty, and free delivery applies on orders above SGD 500.

To see the pieces in person, the Sembawang showroom is open daily from 10am to 10pm at 604 Sembawang Road, #01-18 Sembawang Shopping Centre.

If you have questions about materials or want to discuss which options suit your room’s humidity profile, the design team can be reached at +65 6348 3144 or hello@esteller.sg ahead of your visit.

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> Source: [Esteller Furniture](https://esteller.sg/blogs/articles/how-to-prevent-mould-on-furniture-in-singapore)
