Advanced Odor Treatment

Ozone and Hydroxyl Treatments in Metro Detroit and Southeast Michigan

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments are professional odor-removal methods used when stubborn smells remain after cleaning, water damage, smoke exposure, mold-related concerns, pet odor, musty basement conditions, or contamination events. When a property smells musty, smoky, stale, damp, or contaminated, the odor often reaches beyond the surface. It can settle into air spaces, contents, porous materials, HVAC pathways, and hidden areas where standard cleaning may not reach.

Dr. Mold provides ozone treatment, hydroxyl treatment, and related odor-removal services for homes, businesses, rental properties, real estate listings, restoration projects, and managed buildings across Metro Detroit and Southeast Michigan. If you are searching for ozone treatment near me, hydroxyl treatment near me, professional odor removal, smoke odor removal, musty smell removal, or odor treatment in SE Michigan, our team can help you choose the right solution.

Odor
Treatment support for smoke, musty smells, water damage odors, pet odors, stale air, and lingering contamination odors
Source
We help identify whether odor is tied to moisture, mold, contents, ducts, smoke residue, or affected materials
Local
Serving Plymouth, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Troy, Novi, Livonia, Ann Arbor, and Metro Detroit
Certified
Licensed, insured, IICRC, WRT, and MRS credentialed restoration and remediation support

What are ozone and hydroxyl treatments?

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments are professional deodorization methods used to help break down odor-causing compounds in indoor spaces. They are often considered when cleaning alone is not enough, especially after smoke exposure, water damage, musty odors, microbial concerns, pet odor, long-term vacancy, or situations where a property needs to be prepared for occupancy, sale, or rental turnover.

Ozone treatment uses ozone gas in a controlled, unoccupied environment to target odor molecules in the air and on exposed surfaces. Hydroxyl treatment uses hydroxyl radicals generated by specialized equipment to help reduce odors while often being more flexible in certain occupied or sensitive environments, depending on the site conditions and treatment plan. Both approaches are tools, not shortcuts. The right treatment depends on the source of the smell, the materials involved, safety needs, building use, and whether contamination or moisture still needs to be corrected first.

Dr. Mold connects ozone and hydroxyl treatment to the larger odor-removal process. If odor is coming from mold, water damage, dirty ducts, affected contents, or damp materials, those issues may need to be addressed before treatment can produce a lasting result.

When ozone or hydroxyl treatment may be needed

Many property owners call for odor treatment after they have already tried airing out the space, cleaning surfaces, replacing filters, running fans, or using store-bought deodorizers. If the smell keeps coming back, the issue may be deeper than the surface. Professional ozone or hydroxyl treatment may be appropriate when the source has been addressed but odor compounds remain in the building.

Smoke odor

Smoke smells from cigarettes, fire events, cooking, or long-term exposure can settle into surfaces, contents, ducts, and porous materials.

Musty basement odor

Musty odors may be tied to moisture, stored contents, damp materials, or prior mold concerns in basements and crawl spaces.

Water damage odor

Leaks, flooding, sump failures, and wet materials can leave lingering smells even after visible water is removed.

Pet and organic odors

Pet odor and other organic smells can absorb into soft materials, flooring, contents, and enclosed rooms.

Post-remediation odor

After mold remediation or water restoration, treatment may help address residual odors once source materials are removed or cleaned.

Real estate and rental turnover

Treatment may help prepare a property for sale, showing, lease-up, occupancy, or inspection after stubborn odor issues.

Ozone treatment vs hydroxyl treatment

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments are both used for odor control, but they are not the same. Ozone is a powerful oxidizing treatment that must be performed in a controlled, unoccupied space. People, pets, plants, and certain sensitive materials may need to be removed or protected during treatment. Because ozone requires strict safety procedures, preparation and re-entry guidance are important parts of the process.

Hydroxyl treatment is often used when a gentler or more flexible odor-reduction approach is preferred. Hydroxyl generators are commonly used in restoration settings because they can help address odors over time while fitting certain environments where ozone may not be ideal. The treatment period may be longer depending on odor severity, airflow, room size, and affected materials.

Ozone treatment

Often used for strong odors in unoccupied areas when controlled, professional treatment is appropriate.

Hydroxyl treatment

Often used for odor reduction when a lower-disruption option may be preferred based on site conditions.

Dr. Mold can help you decide which option fits the property, the odor source, the occupancy needs, and the restoration plan.

Why the odor source matters first

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments work best when the source of the odor has already been addressed or is being addressed as part of the project. If water-damaged drywall remains wet, mold growth is still active, contaminated carpet padding is still in place, or contents continue holding odor, treatment may temporarily reduce the smell while the source keeps producing new odor.

That is why Dr. Mold looks at odor removal from a restoration perspective. A musty smell may require mold inspection, mold testing, mold remediation, water damage restoration, contents cleaning, or duct cleaning before odor treatment makes sense.

The best goal is not to cover up odor. It is to remove or reduce the source, treat remaining odor compounds, and help prevent the smell from coming back.

Our ozone and hydroxyl treatment process

Every odor treatment project should be planned around safety, property conditions, odor severity, and the source of the smell. Dr. Mold follows a practical process to help determine whether ozone, hydroxyl, chlorine dioxide, duct cleaning, contents cleaning, or another service is the best fit.

1. Odor concern review. We discuss the odor type, where it is strongest, when it appears, how long it has been present, and whether water damage, smoke, mold, pets, HVAC, or contents are involved.
2. Source and condition evaluation. We consider moisture, affected materials, visible contamination, duct pathways, porous contents, and areas where odor may be trapped.
3. Treatment selection. Depending on the property, we may recommend ozone, hydroxyl, chlorine dioxide treatment, duct cleaning, contents cleaning, remediation, or a combination of services.
4. Preparation guidance. You receive clear instructions for access, occupancy, pets, plants, sensitive materials, contents, and re-entry requirements based on the treatment method.
5. Professional treatment. Equipment and treatment procedures are applied based on the site conditions and the recommended odor-removal plan.
6. Follow-up recommendations. We explain what may help prevent odor from returning, such as moisture control, improved ventilation, duct cleaning, replacement of contaminated porous materials, or further testing.

Ozone, hydroxyl, and chlorine dioxide treatment

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments are not the only advanced odor-removal methods available. Dr. Mold also offers chlorine dioxide treatment, which is used for stubborn odors and environmental concerns after water damage, microbial growth, smoke-related odors, and persistent musty smells. The best option depends on the source, property conditions, safety requirements, and how deeply the odor has affected the space.

In some projects, one treatment method is enough. In others, deodorization may need to be paired with duct cleaning, contents cleaning, material removal, moisture correction, or mold remediation. Dr. Mold helps property owners avoid guessing by recommending the treatment path that fits the actual condition of the property.

Ducts and contents can keep odors circulating

Odors often stay in a building because they are being held by more than the air. Ductwork can move odors from one part of the property to another. Upholstered furniture, cardboard, paper, textiles, carpet, rugs, curtains, wood, and stored contents can absorb odor and release it again over time. If the HVAC system turns on and the smell spreads, duct cleaning or HVAC sanitizing may be part of the solution.

If belongings were exposed to smoke, moisture, musty air, water damage, mold concerns, or long-term storage odors, contents cleaning may help reduce the chance that cleaned rooms become re-contaminated by affected items.

Why choose Dr. Mold for ozone and hydroxyl treatments?

Odor treatment is most effective when performed by a team that understands mold, moisture, water damage, air movement, restoration cleaning, contents, and indoor air quality. Dr. Mold helps Metro Detroit property owners understand why the odor is happening and which treatment method fits the situation. That matters because ozone, hydroxyl, and chlorine dioxide each have different use cases, preparation steps, and safety considerations.

Restoration-focused recommendations. We connect odor treatment to mold, moisture, water damage, ducts, contents, and material conditions.
Multiple odor treatment options. Depending on the issue, we can guide you toward ozone, hydroxyl, chlorine dioxide, duct cleaning, contents cleaning, or remediation support.
Residential and commercial service. We support homeowners, businesses, landlords, property managers, buyers, sellers, and real estate professionals.
Local Southeast Michigan experience. We serve Metro Detroit properties dealing with smoke odors, musty basements, water damage smells, mold-related odors, and indoor air concerns.
Clear preparation and safety guidance. You will understand what needs to happen before treatment, during treatment, and before re-entry.

Learn more about Dr. Mold on our About page, view project examples in our Gallery, read customer Reviews, or request help through the Contact page.

Related services that may help remove odors

Odor Removal

A broader service for musty odors, smoke odors, mold odors, duct odors, and recurring indoor smells.

Chlorine Dioxide Treatment

Another professional treatment option for stubborn odor and environmental concerns.

Duct Cleaning

Helpful when odors or dust may be moving through HVAC pathways.

HVAC Sanitizing

Useful when odor or contamination concerns are connected to air movement systems.

Contents Cleaning

Important when belongings, fabrics, furniture, paper, cardboard, or stored items are holding odor.

Air Quality Testing

Helpful when odor comes with broader indoor air quality concerns.

Ozone and hydroxyl treatments across Metro Detroit

Dr. Mold provides ozone treatment, hydroxyl treatment, odor removal, chlorine dioxide treatment, duct cleaning, HVAC sanitizing, contents cleaning, mold remediation, and water damage restoration support across Metro Detroit and Southeast Michigan.

Service areas include Plymouth, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Troy, Novi, Livonia, Ann Arbor, Northville, Southfield, West Bloomfield, Sterling Heights, Farmington Hills, Rochester, Bloomfield Hills, Canton, Dearborn, Grosse Pointe, Oakland County, Macomb County, Wayne County, Washtenaw County, Livingston County, and surrounding Southeast Michigan communities.

Frequently asked questions about ozone and hydroxyl treatments

What is ozone treatment used for? Ozone treatment is used for strong odors such as smoke, musty smells, pet odors, stale air, and odors after water damage or contamination when the space can be treated under controlled, unoccupied conditions.
What is hydroxyl treatment used for? Hydroxyl treatment is used for odor reduction in restoration settings and may be a better fit when a more flexible or lower-disruption treatment approach is preferred.
Is ozone treatment safe? Ozone treatment requires professional controls. People, pets, plants, and certain sensitive items may need to be removed, and the property must be safe for re-entry before occupants return.
Will ozone or hydroxyl treatment remove mold? These treatments are for odor reduction and deodorization. They do not replace proper mold remediation when active mold growth or contaminated materials are present.
Will odor treatment remove smoke smell? It can help reduce smoke odor, but heavy smoke exposure may also require cleaning of surfaces, contents, ducts, and porous materials.
Why does an odor come back after treatment? Odors can return if the source remains, such as wet materials, mold growth, contaminated carpet, affected contents, dirty ducts, or unresolved moisture.
Which is better, ozone or hydroxyl? The better option depends on the property, odor type, occupancy needs, materials affected, and safety requirements. Dr. Mold can recommend the best fit after reviewing the situation.
Do you provide odor treatments for commercial properties? Yes. Dr. Mold supports residential, commercial, rental, managed, and real estate-related properties across Southeast Michigan.

Need ozone or hydroxyl odor treatment in Southeast Michigan?

If your home, business, rental, or listing has a stubborn odor from smoke, moisture, mold concerns, water damage, pets, stale air, contents, or ductwork, Dr. Mold can help you choose the right odor-removal treatment.

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