South Carolina · ASD
Applied Structural Drying Certification in South Carolina
Applied Structural Drying certification teaches South Carolina restorers the drying science behind getting saturated homes and businesses dry fast after Lowcountry floods and pipe failures. NISCR's online, self-paced Applied Structural Drying course covers psychrometry, airflow, and moisture monitoring, and issues a same-day certificate when you pass. It is ideal for South Carolina techs who want to drop drying times and prevent secondary mold damage.
100% online & self-paced — your certificate the same day, anywhere in South Carolina.
- Self-paced
- Instant certificate
- 2-year validity
Licensing
Do you need a license in South Carolina?
Applied Structural Drying is a technical skill set and is generally not separately licensed in South Carolina; it is performed as part of broader water-mitigation work. However, the larger restoration or repair job it supports may touch contractor or mold-related requirements. A NISCR certificate is a professional credential, not a government license, so verify current South Carolina state and local rules for the overall scope of work you take on.
A NISCR Certificate of Completion confirms completion of NISCR training and examination. It is a professional credential, not a government license. Where local law requires a license to perform a service, the technician is responsible for obtaining it.
Local demand
The applied structural drying market in South Carolina
South Carolina's high humidity makes fast, correct drying critical: Lowcountry and coastal moisture levels around Charleston, Beaufort, and Myrtle Beach mean structures dry slowly and mold takes hold quickly after any water loss. Hurricane flooding, the 2015 Columbia flood scenario, and Upstate freeze bursts all create properties that need precise structural drying to avoid costly secondary damage.
Earning potential
What applied structural drying pros earn in South Carolina
Technicians with proven structural-drying skills in South Carolina commonly see around $19-$32+/hour, with drying specialists and crew leads on large commercial losses earning toward the upper end. Ranges are illustrative only and depend on employer, certifications stacked, storm-season demand, and region; they are not guaranteed.
Technician hourly
$20–35 / hr
Self-employed drying job
$2,000–6,000+
Owner potential
mid five-to-six figures
Illustrative ranges — actual earnings vary by location, effort, and experience, and are not guaranteed.
Curriculum
What you’ll learn
- Read a psychrometric chart to track temperature, relative humidity, GPP, and dew point through a drying job.
- Calculate the number of air movers and dehumidifier capacity a structure requires based on affected area and class of water.
- Choose between refrigerant, LGR, and desiccant dehumidifiers for the conditions and load on site.
- Design directional airflow that moves moisture off surfaces and into the dehumidification system efficiently.
- Apply controlled drying to wet materials — drywall, framing, hardwood, and concrete — instead of premature removal.
- Use moisture meters, hygrometers, and data loggers to establish a dry standard and confirm materials reach it.
By city
Applied Structural Drying certification in South Carolina cities
The process
How it works
Enroll & pay
Secure checkout, instant course access.
Complete the course + short quiz
Self-paced lessons, then a short quiz — 75% to pass, unlimited retries.
Download your certificate
Personalized certificate generated instantly, with a unique verification ID.
Questions
Applied Structural Drying certification in South Carolina — FAQ
- Do I need a license for applied structural drying in South Carolina?
- Structural drying itself is generally not separately licensed in South Carolina, though the overall restoration job may involve contractor or mold considerations. A NISCR certificate documents your training but is not a government license, so verify current requirements for your full scope of work.
- Why is structural drying so important in South Carolina?
- South Carolina's heat and humidity, especially in the coastal Lowcountry, slow natural drying and accelerate mold growth, so professional drying science helps prevent expensive secondary damage after floods and pipe bursts.
