Skip to main content
VerifyHire a proSign in

Washington · ASD

Applied Structural Drying Certification in Washington

Applied Structural Drying certification in Washington teaches the drying science needed to remove deep moisture from framing, subfloors, and assemblies after the heavy rains and flood events common across the Pacific Northwest. This online, self-paced course fits around your existing restoration schedule and delivers a same-day certificate on completion.

100% online & self-paced — your certificate the same day, anywhere in Washington.

Course details
  • Self-paced
  • Instant certificate
  • 2-year validity

Licensing

Do you need a license in Washington?

Applied structural drying is a technical specialty and is generally not separately licensed in Washington. However, drying work performed as part of a larger restoration or rebuild can fall under broader contractor registration rules through the Department of Labor & Industries. This is general guidance only, so confirm current state and local requirements before you advertise paid services.

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 Washington

Western Washington's persistent dampness and marine humidity make thorough structural drying essential to prevent secondary mold growth after any water loss. Combined with seasonal flooding and the region's older, slow-to-dry building stock, skilled drying technicians are needed to bring properties back to safe moisture levels.

Earning potential

What applied structural drying pros earn in Washington

Structural drying specialists in Washington may see illustrative hourly pay roughly between $21 and $34, with higher figures common for technicians who manage complex commercial drying projects. Ranges are illustrative and not guaranteed, varying by employer, region, and workload.

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 Washington cities

The process

How it works

1

Enroll & pay

Secure checkout, instant course access.

2

Complete the course + short quiz

Self-paced lessons, then a short quiz — 75% to pass, unlimited retries.

3

Download your certificate

Personalized certificate generated instantly, with a unique verification ID.

Questions

Applied Structural Drying certification in Washington — FAQ

Do I need a license to do applied structural drying in Washington?
Structural drying itself is generally not separately licensed in Washington, though work tied to repairs or rebuilds may fall under contractor registration. Verify current state and local rules before offering paid services.
Why is structural drying important in Washington's climate?
Western Washington's high humidity and frequent rain mean buildings dry slowly, so proper applied structural drying is critical to stop hidden moisture from turning into costly mold problems.
Does NISCR certification replace a state license?
No. The NISCR certificate is a professional credential proving your drying-science training, not a government license, so any applicable Washington requirements must still be met.

Nearby

Applied Structural Drying certification in other West states