The Seasonal Reality
Indoor air quality isn’t static. It changes dramatically with the seasons as outdoor conditions shift, HVAC usage patterns change, and different pollutant sources become active. A strategy that works beautifully in January might be completely inadequate in July.
Here’s what to expect in each season, and the specific adjustments that make the biggest difference.
Spring (March-May): Pollen Invasion
The problem: Tree pollen peaks in early spring (March-April in most of the U.S.), grass pollen in late spring (May-June). A single birch tree can release 5 million pollen grains per day, and those grains — typically 10-40 microns — easily infiltrate homes through open windows, on clothing, and on pets.
Indoor pollen levels can reach 40-60% of outdoor levels even with windows closed, according to a 2018 study in the journal Aerobiologia. With windows open (as people naturally do in pleasant spring weather), indoor and outdoor levels become nearly identical.
What to do:
- Keep windows closed during peak pollen hours (5 AM to 10 AM, when most plants release pollen) and on high-pollen-count days. Check pollen counts on weather.com or Pollen.com
- Run your air purifier on medium or high during the day, especially in the bedroom. Pollen grains are large enough to settle, but they’re constantly resuspended by movement
- Change clothes and shower before bed if you’ve been outdoors — pollen on your hair and clothing transfers to your pillow
- Upgrade your HVAC filter to MERV 11-13 and run the fan continuously during peak pollen weeks
- Clean or replace your purifier’s pre-filter more frequently — pollen loads up pre-filters faster than everyday dust
Summer (June-August): Humidity and Mold
The problem: Warm air holds more moisture, and in much of the U.S., summer means outdoor humidity above 70%. That humidity infiltrates homes and, when indoor levels exceed 60%, creates conditions for mold growth and dust mite proliferation. Dust mite populations can double in as little as 3 weeks at 70% humidity — and their allergenic feces become airborne and trigger symptoms.
Summer also brings increased indoor VOC levels as heat accelerates off-gassing from furniture, flooring, and building materials. A 2019 study in Indoor Air found that indoor formaldehyde concentrations increase by approximately 30-50% for every 10°F increase in temperature.
What to do:
- Run a dehumidifier in the basement or main living area, set to maintain 45-50% humidity
- Use air conditioning (which dehumidifies as a side effect of cooling) rather than opening windows on humid days
- Run bathroom exhaust fans for 30 minutes after showering, and kitchen exhaust when cooking
- Your air purifier’s carbon filter will saturate faster due to higher VOC levels — check it monthly
- Avoid VOC-heavy activities (painting, using strong cleaning products, applying certain adhesives) during summer unless you can ventilate aggressively
Fall (September-November): Wildfire Smoke and Autumn Allergens
The problem: Ragweed pollen peaks in late summer through fall, affecting roughly 23 million Americans. Simultaneously, wildfire season in the western U.S. now extends through November, with smoke plumes traveling thousands of miles.
The fall of 2023 demonstrated how extreme this can become: Canadian wildfire smoke turned New York City’s sky orange and pushed the AQI to 484, temporarily making it the most polluted city on Earth. Even homes thousands of miles from active fires experienced indoor PM2.5 levels 3-5 times above normal.
What to do:
- Create a “clean room” — typically a bedroom — with a properly sized HEPA purifier, sealed windows, and weather stripping around the door
- Run the purifier on high during active smoke events. Noise is a secondary concern to particulate exposure
- Upgrade to MERV 13 HVAC filter and run the fan continuously
- Avoid creating indoor particles — no vacuuming (unless HEPA), no frying or broiling, no candles or incense
- Monitor outdoor AQI on AirNow.gov and keep windows sealed when AQI exceeds 100
Winter (December-February): Dry Air and Trapped Pollutants
The problem: Cold outdoor air holds very little moisture. When it’s heated indoors, the relative humidity can drop to 15-25% — well below the 30% minimum recommended for respiratory comfort. Dry air irritates nasal passages and airways, making you more susceptible to respiratory infections. A 2020 study in the Annual Review of Virology found that low humidity impairs the mucosal immune response in the respiratory tract.
Simultaneously, homes are sealed tight against the cold, trapping indoor-generated pollutants (cooking particles, VOCs from cleaning, CO2 from respiration) with minimal fresh air exchange.
What to do:
- Use a humidifier in bedrooms, set to maintain 35-45% humidity. Ultrasonic humidifiers should use distilled water to avoid “white dust” (aerosolized minerals that your air purifier will detect as PM2.5)
- Run your air purifier continuously — with windows sealed, indoor-generated particles have nowhere to go
- Ventilate briefly on mild winter days (above 40°F, with good outdoor AQI) — 10 minutes with windows open flushes accumulated CO2 and VOCs
- Monitor CO2 with an air quality monitor — levels above 1,500 ppm in winter indicate insufficient ventilation. Even 5 minutes of window opening drops CO2 dramatically
- Clean humidifiers weekly to prevent microbial growth — a dirty humidifier aerosolizes bacteria and mold, defeating the purpose
Year-Round Habits
Regardless of season:
- Replace HVAC filters on schedule — every 90 days for 1-inch filters, every 6-12 months for 4-inch media cabinets
- Vacuum with a HEPA vacuum at least twice weekly in high-traffic areas
- Keep indoor humidity between 30-50% — the goldilocks zone where mold can’t grow and airways aren’t irritated by dryness
- Test for radon if you haven’t in the past 2 years — radon levels don’t change seasonally the way other pollutants do, but testing is the only way to know
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The Seasonal Rotation Strategy
Different seasons demand different purifier settings and strategies. Spring (pollen): run high in bedroom, keep windows closed, shower before bed to remove pollen from hair. Summer (humidity + ozone): if using A/C, the coil condensation helps dehumidify and pre-filter incoming air — run purifier on auto and save on electricity. Fall (ragweed + leaf mold): similar to spring pollen strategy but add a humidity monitor — fall rains can spike indoor humidity and enable mold. Winter (tightly sealed home + gas heating): CO2 buildup is the hidden villain — use a CO2 monitor and periodically air out even in cold weather.
Many purifier owners set one speed and forget it year-round. A purifier running on medium in January is handling 1/3 the particulate load of the same purifier in May during peak pollen. Adjust seasonally.
Disclosure: We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases. Seasonal guidance based on EPA and CDC recommendations.
