Yellow or amber-colored sticky drips on walls after a tenant moves out are surprisingly common—and it doesn’t have to be cigarette smoke. Here are the most likely causes, ranked from most to least common, plus how to confirm each one.
🟡 Most likely causes
1️⃣ Nicotine residue (even if she “didn’t smoke”)
This is by far the #1 cause.
Important points:
- Tenants sometimes smoke secretly, only in one room, or near windows/bathrooms
- Visitors may have smoked
- Vaping and hookah can still leave residues
- Old nicotine residue can stay dormant for years and reappear with humidity
Signs:
- Yellow/brown oily drips
- Sticky, smeary when touched
- Strong odor when warmed or humid
- Reappears after cleaning
💡 Humidity pulls nicotine out of the paint, causing it to “weep” down the wall.
2️⃣ Surfactant leaching (very common in rentals)
This happens when paint additives migrate to the surface.
Caused by:
- High humidity
- Poor ventilation
- Fresh or low-quality paint
- Bathrooms, kitchens, laundry rooms
Signs:
- Clear to yellowish drips
- Sticky or slightly oily
- No smoke smell
- Appears during humid weather
🧪 This can happen even in non-smoking homes.
3️⃣ Cooking grease vapor
If the tenant cooked frequently (especially frying):
- Aerosolized grease can coat walls
- Heat + humidity causes it to run
- Often near kitchens or open-plan spaces
Signs:
- Yellow film near ceiling or above cabinets
- Greasy feel
- Hard to clean with normal cleaners
4️⃣ Old stains bleeding through paint
Older buildings especially:
- Nicotine, grease, or water stains trapped under paint
- Humidity reactivates them
- Cheap paint without primer worsens this
🧼 Why cleaning didn’t work
Regular cleaners won’t remove:
- Nicotine oils
- Paint surfactants
- Embedded grease
They often spread it instead.
✅ What actually works
Step 1: Identify it
- Rub with isopropyl alcohol on a white cloth
- Yellow/brown transfer = nicotine or grease
- Smell test when room is warm or humid
Step 2: Clean properly
Use one of these:
- TSP (trisodium phosphate) or TSP substitute
- Ammonia-based cleaner (excellent for nicotine)
- Degreaser (for kitchen areas)
⚠️ Ventilate well. Never mix cleaners.
Step 3: Seal it
If it comes back, cleaning alone won’t fix it.
- Apply a stain-blocking primer:
- Shellac-based (BEST for nicotine)
- Oil-based (second best)
- Then repaint with quality latex paint
This permanently stops bleed-through.
🚩 When to suspect smoking despite denial
- Drips appear mainly near ceilings
- Worse in bathrooms/bedrooms
- Strong smell when heating is on
- Yellow stains on vents, light switches, outlets
Bottom line
Even if your tenant said she didn’t smoke, the yellow dripping is most commonly:
✔ nicotine residue
✔ surfactant leaching from paint
✔ or cooking grease + humidity
If you want, tell me:
- Which rooms it’s happening in
- Age of the building
- When you last painted
- Whether it feels sticky or oily
I can tell you exactly which cause it is and the cheapest permanent fix.