Quick answer: Your sealant needs professional replacement if it’s cracking, crumbling, discoloured with mould, lifting away from the surface, feels hard and brittle, or is more than 5–10 years old. These signs mean water is likely getting behind the seal, and a DIY top-up won’t fix it — the old sealant needs to be fully removed and redone by a professional.
Sealant is one of those things nobody thinks about until it fails — and by the time it fails, water has usually already found its way somewhere it shouldn’t. Whether it’s around a bath, a shower, a window frame, or an expansion joint, sealant has one job: keep water and air out. When it stops doing that job, small problems turn into damp, mould, and costly repairs fast.
Here’s how to know when it’s time to stop reaching for a DIY tube and call in proper sealant services instead.
1. Cracking, Splitting, or Crumbling
Fresh sealant is smooth, flexible, and continuous. Once it starts to crack, split, or crumble away in pieces, its ability to flex with movement in the building is gone. A quick DIY patch might hide the problem for a few weeks, but the underlying bond has usually broken down completely, and water will keep finding a way through the gaps you can’t see.
2. Discolouration and Mould Growth
Grey, black, or pink staining on sealant — especially around baths, showers, and sinks — is a sign that moisture has been sitting in the material for a while. Surface cleaning might lift some of the staining, but if mould keeps coming back, it’s often growing underneath the bead, not just on top of it. At that point, no amount of scrubbing fixes it; the sealant needs to come out.
3. Gaps Between the Sealant and the Surface
Run your finger along the edge of a sealant line. If you feel a lip, a gap, or the sealant lifting away from the tile, frame, or surface, water is already getting behind it. This is one of the clearest signs that a full reseal is overdue, not just a top-up.
4. It Feels Hard, Brittle, or Loses Its Squeeze
Good sealant stays slightly flexible for years. If pressing it leaves no give at all, or it feels dry and brittle to the touch, it has aged past its useful life. Brittle sealant can’t accommodate the natural expansion and contraction of a building, which is exactly when hairline cracks start to appear.
5. Recurring Damp, Smells, or Peeling Paint Nearby
If you’re noticing a musty smell near a window, damp patches on a wall below a joint, or paint peeling close to a sealed edge, the sealant is very likely the entry point. These symptoms tend to show up well after the failure started, so by the time you spot them, water ingress may have been happening for a while.
6. It’s Been More Than 5–10 Years
Even sealant that looks fine can be past its best. Bathroom and kitchen sealants typically last around 5 years, and exterior sealants exposed to weather, UV, and temperature swings often need replacing every 10 years or less. If you can’t remember the last time it was done, it’s worth having it checked.
When a DIY Fix Isn’t Enough
A tube of sealant from the hardware shop can patch small, isolated issues. But once you’re seeing several of the signs above — cracking, mould, gaps, and brittleness together — DIY sealant tends to fail again within months because it’s applied over old, compromised material rather than a clean, properly prepared surface.
This is where calling in a professional, sometimes known locally as the mastic man, makes the difference. A specialist doesn’t just squeeze in a new bead over the top of the old one. Proper sealant services involve:
- Fully removing the old, failed sealant back to a clean surface
- Checking for and addressing any hidden damp or damage behind it
- Preparing and priming the surface correctly
- Applying the right grade of sealant for the location — bathroom, kitchen, exterior, or expansion joint — for a durable, watertight, and neat finish
Don’t Wait for the Damage to Spread
Sealant failure is deceptively slow-moving until it isn’t. What starts as a small crack around a bath or window can lead to water tracking into walls, floors, or subfloors, and by then you’re often looking at repair costs far beyond a resealing job.
If you’re seeing any of the warning signs above, it’s worth getting a professional opinion sooner rather than later.
Local Sealant Services Across Bedfordshire
Bedfordshire’s mix of older period homes and newer builds — from Bedford and Luton to Dunstable, Leighton Buzzard, Biggleswade, and the surrounding villages — means sealant issues show up in all sorts of properties, and our seasonal weather doesn’t do failing sealant any favours. Pioneer Sealants Ltd works with homeowners and businesses across the county, so if your bathroom, kitchen, or window sealant is showing any of the signs above, help is close by.
Get in touch with Pioneer Sealants Ltd, your local mastic man for Bedfordshire, for expert sealant services and a proper, lasting fix — visit us at pioneersealantsltd.co.uk.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my sealant needs replacing? Look for cracking, crumbling, mould staining, gaps between the sealant and the surface, or sealant that feels hard and brittle rather than flexible. Any one of these, or sealant older than 5–10 years, is a sign it’s time for professional replacement rather than a DIY patch.
Can I just apply new sealant over the old sealant? No. New sealant won’t bond properly to old, degraded sealant, and it will trap any existing mould or moisture underneath. A professional will always remove the old bead completely before resealing.
How often should bathroom sealant be replaced? Bathroom and kitchen sealant typically needs replacing every 5 years, though this can be sooner in high-moisture or poorly ventilated areas.
What is a “mastic man”? “Mastic man” is a common local term for a tradesperson who specialises in applying and replacing sealant (mastic) around baths, showers, windows, and expansion joints in buildings.
Do you provide sealant services across Bedfordshire? Yes. Pioneer Sealants Ltd provides professional sealant services throughout Bedfordshire, including Bedford, Luton, Dunstable, Leighton Buzzard, and Biggleswade.






