HEPA Air Filtration
Mold spores float through the air long after cleanup starts. Our HEPA air scrubbers capture particles down to 0.3 microns, restoring safe indoor air quality.
Mold Spores Stay Airborne for Hours
When walls or flooring are disturbed, millions of microscopic spores become airborne. Standard filters can’t catch them — they drift into clean rooms and your lungs. HEPA air scrubbers pull contaminated air through medical-grade filters, trapping spores and returning clean air back to your home.
WHAT YOU CAN EXPECT
Continuous Air Cleaning
HEPA scrubbers run 24/7 during mold cleanup to capture airborne spores.
Medical-Grade Filtration
Filters capture 99.97% of particles as small as 0.3 microns.
Cleaner Air for Your Family
Removes spores, dust, and odors that spread during remediation.
Documented Protocols
Use of HEPA filtration logged and photographed for insurance compliance.
Our 3-Step Restoration Process
Moisture, odor, and material issues mapped and logged for full coverage.
We stop the spread on arrival and prevent secondary damage.
We prepare adjuster-ready files and push your claim forward to approval.
HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT RESTORATION?
Here are some of the things Oregon homeowners ask us most before starting a job:
How fast can your crews get here in an emergency?
Does Insurance usually covers water or mold damage?
Do i have to pay anything out of pocket?
Can you guarantee odor and mold wont come back?
HVAC filters and store-bought purifiers only catch larger particles. Mold spores slip through and spread everywhere. Insurance also expects HEPA filtration as part of professional remediation protocols.
We place HEPA scrubbers inside containment zones and, when needed, in nearby rooms. These machines run continuously during remediation, capturing spores, dust, and contaminants until air quality tests show safe results.
What Oregon Homeowners Say About Rutman
Breathe Easier During Mold Cleanup
Keep your air safe while mold is removed. Call today for professional HEPA air filtration during remediation.


