The Austin Guide to Distinguishing Allergies from Mold.
Cedar fever symptoms typically appear outdoors during Austin's winter pollen season (December–February). Mold exposure symptoms often persist year-round and worsen inside specific rooms. If your antihistamine stops working after allergy season ends, your home may deserve a closer look.
Austin's Mountain Cedar (Ashe juniper) releases pollen in enormous clouds from late December through February. Mold is different — it grows indoors, releases spores year-round, and causes symptoms that are easy to misread as seasonal allergies.


Cedar fever gets most of the attention, but Austin’s periodic high humidity, especially in warmer months, can also create conditions that support indoor mold growth when moisture isn’t well controlled.

Indoor mold growth risk increases when relative humidity stays above 60%. During Austin’s more humid months, homes that don’t adequately control moisture can spend extended periods in this range, allowing humidity to accumulate in hidden areas like wall cavities, flooring, and HVAC systems.
Austin’s network of lakes and creeks—including Lady Bird Lake, Barton Creek, Lake Austin, and Lake Travis—can create small pockets of higher localized humidity near the water. However, indoor moisture and mold risk are driven far more by how a home manages humidity than by proximity to these waterways.
Not all mold is the same. Some species found in water-damaged homes release compounds known as mycotoxins. Exposure has been associated with symptoms such as persistent fatigue, headaches, and difficulty concentrating, sometimes described as "brain fog." These cognitive symptoms are not typically associated with cedar fever, and can be a meaningful indicator that the issue is environmental, not seasonal.
Many of Austin's most desirable neighborhoods feature historic bungalows built on pier-and-beam foundations. These crawl spaces were common construction in Central Texas before slab foundations became standard — and they present a specific mold risk: without effective vapor barriers, ground moisture can migrate upward into floor joists and subflooring, creating hidden mold colonies that residents may never see, but often smell.

These neighborhoods have a significant concentration of pier-and-beam housing stock where crawl space moisture assessment is particularly relevant:
Austin air conditioners run for the better part of ten months a year. This continuous operation means HVAC coils accumulate condensation, and when drainage is imperfect, moisture creates ideal conditions for mold inside the air handler itself — which the system then distributes to every room.

If any of these apply to your situation, a professional assessment may be worth considering.