Really struggling with humidity levels in our house, trying to get a better understanding of it all. Keep reading to open windows, which we do but when humidity levels are 93 percent outside surely that will make the humidity levels worse in the house? If the house is sitting at 70?
Two points.
1) What you call "humidity level" is actually Relative Humidity. You meter is probably marked "RH"
This is the amount of water vapour, as a percentage of the amount that air AT THIS TEMPERATURE can hold. Hot air can hold more than cold. So a metre of hot air in the Sahara holds more water vapour than a metre of cold air in Manchester. But the air in Manchester feels damp, and has high RH, and the air in the Sahara feels dry, and has low RH. Houses in UK, especially in winter, are usually warmer than the outdoors air.
It therefore follows that if you replace some of the air inside your house, with air from outside, the outside air will contain less water, and the RH will drop when if warms up.
2) Houses do not create water. The activities inside the house put water into the air. In UK homes the biggest cause of damp, condensation and mould is water vapour from wet washing draped around or hung on radiators, followed by stesmy showers with insufficient extraction. Water vapour should he removed, quickly, at source. If you do not have a tumble drier, put wet washing in the bathroom and turn on the extractor fan. This will suck out the water vapour and prevent it drifting round the house.
Damp can also he caused by building defects such as spilling gutters, leaking plumbing and bridged DPCs, but these are less common and will be localised to the source.