Quick Answer
Window condensation in Melbourne winter happens when warm, moist indoor air hits cold glass — it’s not a fault with your windows, it’s a ventilation and humidity problem. You can fix most cases with better ventilation, a dehumidifier ($80–$300), window insulation film ($20–$60 per window), or secondary glazing ($150–$400 per window). Left untreated, condensation causes mould, rotting timber frames, and health issues — act before July deepens.

If you’ve noticed water pooling on your windowsills every morning, streaks running down glass, or a persistent damp smell near windows during winter, you’re not alone. Condensation is one of the most common complaints from Melbourne homeowners, particularly in SE suburbs like Dandenong, Narre Warren, and Cranbourne where older housing stock — built before double-glazing was standard — is common.
The good news: most condensation problems are fixable without replacing your windows. Here’s how to diagnose the cause and fix it yourself, or know when to call a professional.
Why Do Windows Get Condensation in Melbourne Winter?
Condensation forms when warm, moisture-laden air inside your home contacts a cold surface — your single-glazed window glass. Melbourne’s winters (June–August) are particularly prone to this because:
- Indoor heating creates warm, moist air from cooking, showers, breathing, and drying laundry
- Single-glazed windows (common in homes built before 2000) have surface temperatures as low as 4–8°C on cold mornings
- Modern draught-sealing paradoxically traps moisture inside because fresh air can’t circulate
- Older brick veneer homes in SE Melbourne have limited ceiling-to-floor insulation, keeping walls and frames cold

Step 1: Identify Where the Moisture Is Coming From
Before spending money on window film or a dehumidifier, find the humidity source. Run through this checklist:
| Source | Contribution to Indoor Humidity | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Drying laundry indoors | Very high — adds 2–4 litres of moisture per load | Dry outdoors or use ducted dryer vented outside |
| Unflued gas heater | High — combustion releases water vapour directly into room | Use flued heater or ventilate room while running |
| Cooking without rangehood | Moderate — boiling water adds significant moisture | Run rangehood, open kitchen window while cooking |
| Long hot showers, no exhaust fan | Moderate — each 10-minute shower adds ~0.5 litres | Run exhaust fan during and 15 minutes after shower |
| Aquariums, indoor plants (many) | Low to moderate — ongoing slow evaporation | Move near windows with ventilation |
| Breathing and occupants | Low but constant — averages 0.3L per person per hour | Ventilate with trickle vents or window opening |
Step 2: Improve Ventilation (Free to $150)
Open Windows Briefly in the Morning
Even 5–10 minutes of cross-ventilation in the morning flushes humid overnight air and drops the dew point significantly. Open opposite windows in the house to create a through-draft. Yes, it’s cold — but it works.
Install Trickle Vents
Trickle vents are small slots drilled into window frames or walls that allow constant low-level air exchange. They cost $15–$40 per vent at Mitre 10 or your local hardware store, and many modern aluminium window frames can have them fitted without tools. Check with the manufacturer before drilling into uPVC frames.
Use Exhaust Fans Properly
Kitchen rangehood and bathroom exhaust fans must vent outside — not into the roof cavity. Check that your exhaust fan has external ducting. Run the bathroom fan for at least 15 minutes after showering.
Step 3: Reduce Humidity at the Source ($80–$300)
Portable Dehumidifier
A portable compressor dehumidifier is the single most effective fix for severe condensation. It pulls moisture directly from the air before it reaches your windows. In Melbourne’s climate:
| Dehumidifier Type | Capacity | Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desiccant (e.g., Ionmax ION612) | 7 litres/day | $180–$250 | Single bedroom or small living room; works in cold rooms |
| Compressor (e.g., Inventor 20L) | 20 litres/day | $220–$380 | Open plan living areas; more efficient above 15°C |
| Peltier (mini, no-brand) | 0.5–1 litre/day | $50–$90 | Very small bedrooms only; not effective for whole rooms |
In Melbourne’s winter, desiccant models work better than compressor types in unheated rooms (like bedrooms overnight) because compressor dehumidifiers struggle below 15°C. Run the dehumidifier in the rooms most affected — usually bedrooms and the living room.

Step 4: Insulate the Cold Glass Surface ($20–$400 per window)
If ventilation and humidity control aren’t enough — or if you have a rental property you can’t modify heavily — insulating the glass surface itself raises the temperature so condensation doesn’t form.
Window Insulation Film (DIY, $20–$60 per window)
Secondary glazing film is a transparent shrink-wrap film applied to the window frame with double-sided tape, then heat-shrunk flat with a hair dryer. It creates a trapped air gap that raises the inner glass surface temperature by 3–6°C. Brands include 3M Window Insulation Film Kit and Magiflex.
The film is not permanent — it can be removed at the end of winter without damaging paint. It does reduce clarity slightly but is nearly invisible on windows you don’t look through closely.
How to apply window insulation film:
- Clean the frame thoroughly — film won’t bond to dusty or painted surfaces
- Apply double-sided tape around the window frame perimeter (inside of the frame, not the glass)
- Cut film with 5cm clearance on each side
- Press film onto the tape, pulling taut to avoid creases
- Use a hair dryer on medium heat, moving in overlapping passes until film shrinks taut
- Trim excess with a box cutter
Secondary Glazing Panels ($150–$400 per window)
For a semi-permanent upgrade, secondary glazing adds a second panel inside the existing window — either a magnetic acrylic panel (like Magnetite) or a DIY aluminium-framed glass panel. These are popular in SE Melbourne rental units because they’re removable and don’t require building permits.
Step 5: Address Mould That Has Already Formed
If you already have mould on window frames, sills, or nearby walls, treat it before it spreads:
| Surface | Mould Severity | Treatment | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Painted timber sill | Surface only (black spots) | White vinegar or diluted bleach (1:10), scrub, repaint with mould-resistant paint | $20–$50 DIY |
| Aluminium frame (black staining) | Surface mould in gaskets | Spray with Selleys Rapid Mould Killer, wipe; replace gaskets if cracked | $15–$30 DIY |
| Wall plaster beside window | Penetrating mould (pink or black patches) | Prime with Zinsser Mould Killer, repaint with Dulux Wash & Wear mould-resistant | $60–$150 DIY |
| Timber frame (soft, black throughout) | Structural rot | Replace frame section — call a licensed carpenter | $300–$800 professional |
| Wall cavity (musty smell but no visible mould) | Internal mould — potential WHS issue | Engage a licensed building inspector | $250–$600 professional |

Troubleshooting: What Your Condensation Pattern Tells You
| Pattern | Likely Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Only bedroom windows, every morning | Breathing/occupants overnight, poor ventilation | Trickle vent, crack window before bed, desiccant dehumidifier |
| Whole house, worst in kitchen and bathroom | High humidity generation — cooking, showers, laundry | Improve exhaust fans, stop drying laundry indoors, ventilate while cooking |
| Only north-facing windows | Unlikely — check for air leak around frame allowing outside moisture in | Re-seal frame with silicone; check weep holes on aluminium frames aren’t blocked |
| Between the glass panes (double-glazed windows) | Failed IGU (insulated glass unit) — seal has broken down | Call a glazier to replace the IGU — this is not DIY-fixable |
| Walls and ceiling, not just windows | Interstitial condensation — moisture in wall cavity, or rising damp | Call a building inspector — may need vapour barrier or subfloor ventilation |
When to Call a Professional
DIY fixes handle most condensation problems. Call a licensed tradesperson when:
- Double-glazed windows fog between the panes — the IGU seal has failed. A glazier replaces the glass unit (typically $200–$500 per window). You cannot fix this without replacing the sealed unit.
- Mould appears on walls away from windows, or on ceilings — this may indicate a roof leak, failed waterproofing, or rising damp that’s unrelated to ventilation. A licensed builder or building inspector can pinpoint the source.
- Timber window frames feel soft or spongy — structural rot has set in. A licensed carpenter must assess and replace the affected timber before mould spreads to the wall framing.
- Your unflued gas heater is the humidity culprit — converting to a ducted or reverse-cycle system is a licensed gas fitting job in Victoria. Only a licensed gasfitter registered with Energy Safe Victoria can connect or modify gas appliances.
Top 10 Tips and Gotchas for Melbourne Window Condensation
- Don’t seal every draught at once without adding ventilation. Draught-sealing without trickle vents traps humidity, making condensation worse. Add passive ventilation before blocking every gap.
- Wipe sills daily if condensation is severe. Leaving water to sit on timber sills accelerates rot. A 30-second wipe each morning buys you time while you implement longer fixes.
- Reverse-cycle air conditioners also dehumidify. Running your split system in heating mode removes moisture as it heats — often more efficient than a separate dehumidifier in Melbourne’s moderate winters.
- Check that roof insulation isn’t blocking roof vents. Blocked roof vents reduce air exchange through the roof cavity, which pushes moisture back down through ceilings.
- Don’t use unflued LPG heaters for whole-home heating. Portable LPG heaters release enormous amounts of water vapour — up to 1.6 litres of moisture per kilogram of LPG burned. They’re for spot heating only.
- Window insulation film is renter-friendly. It peels off without damage to paint, making it ideal for rental properties in Frankston, Cranbourne, and Pakenham where landlords won’t approve permanent changes.
- Condensation on internal walls (not just glass) signals a bigger problem. This is interstitial condensation inside the wall cavity — get a builder to check your vapour barrier and subfloor ventilation.
- Mould-resistant paint is not the same as regular white paint. Standard paint will re-mould within months. Use Dulux Wash & Wear, Solver Cleanability or Taubmans Endure with added mould inhibitor for lasting protection.
- Check weep holes on aluminium windows. Most aluminium frames have small holes at the bottom that drain condensation away. If these are blocked with dirt or silicone, water pools inside the frame and breeds mould. Clear them with a toothpick.
- Measure your humidity before spending money. A $15 hygrometer from Bunnings or Mitre 10 shows whether your home is actually over 60% RH — if humidity is fine and condensation persists, the problem is the glass temperature, not the air, and insulation film is the fix.

Local Melbourne Resources
- Bunnings Window Film & Insulation — 3M and Magiflex film kits, hygrometers, dehumidifiers
- Mitre 10 Dehumidifiers — desiccant and compressor models, ventilation accessories
- Magnetite Secondary Glazing — Melbourne-based supplier for secondary glazing panels, with local installation teams across SE suburbs
- Energy Safe Victoria — Heaters and Open Fires — information on safe heater use in Victoria, including unflued gas heater rules
- Victorian Building Authority — find licensed builders and building inspectors for structural mould or damp issues
FAQ: Window Condensation in Melbourne Winter
Is condensation on windows covered by home insurance?
Generally, no. Condensation is considered a maintenance and ventilation issue, not sudden accidental damage. However, if condensation has led to structural rot in frames or wall framing, a building defects claim may apply — check your policy with your insurer. Mould arising from a leaking roof or burst pipe (a covered event) may be claimable.
My windows fog up but then clear by mid-morning — do I still need to act?
Yes. Even if condensation evaporates by 9am, the water has been sitting on timber sills and frame joints every morning. Over a Melbourne winter of 60–90 days, that repeated wetting and drying causes timber to rot and mould to establish in joints. The clearing is just the room warming up — the nightly damage is still happening.
Does opening windows in winter actually help, or does it let in cold damp air?
It helps. Melbourne’s outdoor winter air, while cold (6–12°C), is typically drier than heavily occupied indoor air. Opening windows for 5–10 minutes flushes moisture-laden indoor air and replaces it with drier outdoor air that, once reheated indoors, holds much less relative humidity. The small heat loss is worth it — most heating systems recover within 15 minutes.
My double-glazed windows have fog between the panes — can I fix this myself?
No. Fog between the panes means the hermetic seal on the IGU (insulated glass unit) has failed, allowing moist air in. The only fix is replacing the IGU, which must be done by a glazier. The frame usually stays; only the sealed glass unit is replaced. In Melbourne, this typically costs $200–$500 per window depending on size.
Is it worth upgrading to double glazing to fix condensation in Melbourne?
For owner-occupiers planning to stay long-term: yes, for heavily affected rooms. Double glazing raises the inner glass surface temperature by 8–12°C compared to single glazing, eliminating condensation on the glass almost completely. Costs range from $600–$1,500 per window installed in Melbourne. But if budget is a constraint, window insulation film ($30–$60 per window DIY) achieves 60–70% of the thermal benefit for a fraction of the cost.
We have a bathroom with no exhaust fan — can I just open a window instead?
Opening a window during a shower helps but isn’t as effective as an exhaust fan, because bathroom fans are designed to rapidly remove moisture-laden air mechanically. If you can’t install an exhaust fan (e.g., a rental), open the window fully during the shower and leave it open for 20 minutes afterwards, and keep the bathroom door closed so moisture doesn’t migrate to the rest of the house. A battery-operated portable dehumidifier in the bathroom is also effective.