A desktop humidor holds a handful of cigars with a little gel or a few beads. A walk-in humidor or cigar room is a different problem entirely — it's a whole enclosed space that needs active, automatic humidification to stay in range. The target is the same as any good humidor: about 65–70°F and 68–72% relative humidity (the classic “70/70”, give or take to taste). The difference is that at room scale you can't get there with passive packs — you need a humidifier holding the number for you. This guide covers the targets and how to humidify a cigar room properly.
Why humidity matters for cigars
Cigars are dried, aged tobacco, and they live or die by moisture. In the right range they stay supple, burn evenly, and develop flavor as they age. Too dry (below ~65% RH) and the oils evaporate, the wrapper cracks, and the cigar burns hot and harsh. Too humid (above ~72–75% RH) and they turn spongy, won't draw, can grow mold, and — worst of all — you risk hatching tobacco beetles, which thrive when it's both warm and damp. Holding a steady humidity (and a moderate temperature) is what protects an entire room of inventory.
The 70/70 rule — and the range that actually works
The old saying is “70/70”: 70°F and 70% RH. It's a fine starting point, but most experienced smokers settle into a band by preference:
| Setpoint | Temp | RH | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional “70/70” | ~70°F (21°C) | 70% | The classic default |
| Common sweet spot | 65–70°F (18–21°C) | 68–70% | Supple cigars, good burn |
| Drier preference | 65–68°F (18–20°C) | 62–65% | A firmer cigar and easier burn |
Pick a target in the 62–72% RH range, keep the temperature moderate (and below ~73°F to stay out of beetle territory), and — most importantly — hold it steady. Swings are harder on cigars than a setpoint a few points off.
Walk-in vs. passive: when you need active humidification
Passive humidification — gel jars, beads, or humidity packs — works because a small sealed box has very little air to condition. Scale up to a closet, a cabinet room, or a full walk-in and that approach falls apart: there's too much air volume, too much wall and shelf surface absorbing moisture (especially Spanish cedar), and every time the door opens the room dumps humidity. A walk-in humidor needs an active humidifier that adds moisture on demand and a humidistat that holds the setpoint automatically — the same logic as a greenhouse or a cheese cave, just tuned to cigar numbers.
Building and humidifying a cigar room
A well-built walk-in humidor has a few key elements:
- A sealed, insulated space — ideally lined with Spanish cedar, which buffers humidity, adds aroma, and helps deter beetles.
- An active humidity source — sized to the room's air volume to push and hold 68–72% RH.
- A humidistat — so the humidifier runs only when RH drops below your target.
- Gentle air circulation — a quiet fan so humidity is even across the room and no damp pockets form.
- Calibrated hygrometers — at more than one spot in a larger room (calibrate with the salt test).
How to hold the humidity
An ultrasonic mist maker is a natural fit for a cigar room: it produces cool fog (no heat added to a space you want at ~68°F), it's quiet, and you scale output to the room by disc count.
Airflow, rotation, and avoiding mold & beetles
High humidity with stagnant, warm air is exactly what grows mold and hatches tobacco beetles, so circulation and temperature control matter as much as the humidity number. Keep gentle air movement, hold the temperature moderate (below ~73°F), rotate stock so older boxes don't sit in a dead corner, and inspect regularly. If you ever see the fine dust or tiny holes of a beetle problem, freeze the affected cigars and dry the room down. White surface mold on cigars is bad (unlike on cheese) — it means too humid and too still.
Water and cleanliness
Use clean distilled or RO water in an ultrasonic humidifier — it keeps mineral dust from settling on cigars and keeps the disc efficient. Empty and wipe the reservoir periodically, clean scale off the disc with vinegar, and never let standing water grow biofilm. Clean water in means clean fog out.
Walk-in humidor FAQ
What humidity should a walk-in humidor be?
About 68–72% RH (the “70%” half of 70/70), with many smokers preferring 65–69%. Keep it steady and pair it with a moderate temperature.
What temperature should a cigar room be?
Around 65–70°F. Stay below ~73°F — warmer, damp conditions are when tobacco beetles hatch.
Can I use humidity packs in a walk-in humidor?
Not really — packs and beads are for small sealed boxes. A room has too much air and surface area, so it needs active humidification on a humidistat.
How do I humidify a large cigar room?
Use an active humidifier sized to the room's air volume, on a humidistat, with a circulation fan. An ultrasonic mist maker works well because it's cool, quiet, and scalable.
Why are my cigars moldy or spongy?
Too humid (and likely too still). Drop toward 68–70% RH, add air circulation, and check your hygrometer is calibrated.
Why are my cigars drying out and cracking?
Too dry — RH has fallen below the mid-60s. Raise it back into range and look for leaks or a door that doesn't seal.
Hold your cigar room at the right humidity
A walk-in humidor is just a humidity-controlled room — and holding 68–72% RH across that much air is a job for active humidification. A cool-fog ultrasonic humidifier on a humidistat does it quietly and automatically, scaled to your space.
Shop ultrasonic mist maker kits →
More from House of Hydro: Humidor humidifier guide · Mist Maker FAQ & sizing guide · DIY humidifier parts · Commercial humidifier (large rooms).
Humidity and temperature figures reflect widely accepted cigar-storage ranges. Adjust to your own preference and conditions, and keep a calibrated hygrometer in the room.