Why Humidity Hits Harder in Tyler and East Texas
By mid-July, most Tyler homeowners have stopped talking about the heat and started talking about how it feels. It is not just hot outside. It is heavy. Sticky. The kind of air that makes 88 degrees feel closer to 100, and the kind of air that keeps working its way into your home no matter how hard your AC runs.
That is humidity, and in East Texas it is doing more to your comfort, your energy bill, and your home itself than most people realize. Here is what is actually happening, how to spot the warning signs, and what can be done about it before August makes everything worse.
Texas is a big state, and not all of it deals with humidity the same way. West Texas is dry heat. Tyler and the rest of East Texas sit close enough to the Gulf that summer air carries significant moisture along with the heat, and that combination is what makes July and August here feel so much more oppressive than the thermometer alone would suggest.
Your body cools itself through evaporation. Sweat needs dry air to evaporate efficiently. When the air is already saturated with moisture, sweat sits on your skin instead of evaporating, and your internal cooling system stops working the way it is supposed to. That is why a humid 88-degree day in Tyler can feel more uncomfortable than a dry 95-degree day somewhere else.
Your house has the same problem your body does, just less obviously.
How Humidity Overworks Your AC System
Central air conditioning removes both heat and moisture from your indoor air, but it was never designed to be your primary dehumidifier. Cooling is the main job. Moisture removal happens as a byproduct of that process, and in a normal, moderately humid climate, that byproduct is usually enough.
East Texas summers push past normal. When humidity levels climb into the range they regularly hit here, a standard AC system has to run longer just to pull enough moisture out of the air to keep things comfortable, on top of the cooling it is already working hard to deliver. That extra runtime shows up in two places: your electric bill and the wear on your equipment.
This is part of why a correctly sized, well-maintained system matters so much in this region specifically. A system that is even slightly oversized for your home will cool the air quickly, shut off before it has run long enough to remove adequate moisture, and leave your home feeling cold and clammy at the same time. That combination, cold and damp, is one of the clearest signs a humidity problem is present.
Signs Humidity Is a Problem in Your Home
Some of these are obvious. Others build slowly enough that homeowners get used to them before realizing something is actually wrong.
Musty Odors or Visible Mold
A musty smell in closets, bathrooms, or basements is one of the most reliable indicators of excess indoor humidity. Mold and mildew need moisture to grow, and East Texas summers provide plenty of it. If you are noticing this smell in rooms that seem otherwise clean, humidity is very likely the underlying cause.
Condensation on Windows and Ducts
Sweating windows, damp spots around window frames, or moisture beading on ductwork all point to the same issue. The air inside your home is holding more moisture than it should, and it is finding cool surfaces to condense on.
A Home That Feels Cold and Damp at the Same Time
If your thermostat says 72 degrees but the house still feels uncomfortable, sticky, or clammy, the temperature is not the problem. The moisture content of the air is. This is one of the most common complaints Evans Air hears from Tyler homeowners during peak summer, and it almost always traces back to humidity rather than a cooling failure.
Warped Wood, Peeling Paint, or Swollen Doors
Wood absorbs and releases moisture from the air around it. Doors that used to close easily but now stick, trim that has started to warp, or paint that is bubbling and peeling are signs that humidity has been elevated in your home for a while, not just on an especially bad week.
What Actually Controls Humidity, and What Doesn’t
Your AC Alone Often Isn’t Enough
A standard central AC system helps, but during peak East Texas humidity, help is not the same as solving the problem. If your system is undersized, aging, or simply not built to handle the moisture load your home is dealing with, you can run it constantly and still feel damp indoors.
Regular AC maintenance matters more in a humid climate than a dry one. A system with a dirty coil, low refrigerant, or restricted airflow loses moisture-removal capacity even faster than it loses cooling capacity, which means humidity problems are often the first symptom of a system that needs attention.
A Correctly Sized System Changes the Equation
One of the most overlooked factors in humidity control is proper system sizing. A system that is too large for a home cools fast and shuts off quickly, without running long enough to adequately dehumidify. This is a common issue in homes that have had systems replaced without a proper load calculation. If you are considering an AC installation or replacement, correct sizing should be part of that conversation, not an afterthought.
Ductless Mini-Splits Handle Humidity Differently
For additions, garages, sunrooms, or homes with rooms that never seem to feel right no matter what the rest of the house is set to, ductless mini-split systems often manage humidity more effectively than a central system stretched to cover an odd space. They run longer at lower speeds in many cases, which improves moisture removal in the specific area they are conditioning.
Indoor Air Quality Solutions Address What Humidity Leaves Behind
Once humidity has been sitting in a home for a while, it does not just disappear when the moisture level drops. Mold spores, mildew, and musty odors can linger. This is where indoor air quality solutions come in, including UV air purifier systems that target the biological growth humidity leaves behind rather than just the moisture itself. Evans Air currently offers $100 off a UV air purifier system for homeowners dealing with this exact issue.
A Smart Thermostat Can Help You Track It
Many modern thermostats display indoor humidity percentage alongside temperature, which gives you an actual number to watch instead of relying on how a room feels. Indoor humidity between 30 and 50 percent is generally considered comfortable. If yours is regularly reading above that during summer, it is worth having a technician take a closer look at your system.
When to Call Someone About It
A little humidity discomfort during the hottest weeks of summer is normal in East Texas. Persistent dampness, musty smells that will not go away, visible condensation, or a home that never quite feels comfortable despite a working AC system are not things to just live with through August.
Evans Air Conditioning has been serving Tyler, Longview, Lindale, Bullard, and the surrounding East Texas area since 1978, and humidity-related comfort issues are one of the most common calls we get every summer. A technician can evaluate whether the issue is your system’s capacity, its sizing, an airflow restriction, or an indoor air quality concern, and walk you through what actually fixes it rather than just masking it for a few days.
Start With an Honest Look at Your System
If your home has felt sticky, damp, or musty despite a working AC, the $49 HVAC Tune-Up and Safety Check is a low-cost way to find out whether your system is keeping up with East Texas humidity the way it should be.
Call 903-993-4779 to schedule a visit, or use the form below to request an appointment and a member of the Evans team will confirm your arrival window.
