Short answer
Public guidance does not give one simple time limit. The key risk is breathing contaminated particles when fresh rodent waste or nesting material is disturbed.
What it means
CDC explains that the virus can get into the air when fresh urine, droppings, or nesting materials from infected rodents are stirred up. That is why safe cleanup steps focus on ventilating, wetting contaminated material, and avoiding dry sweeping.
What to know
Instead of trying to time the air, treat rodent-contaminated spaces carefully. Follow official cleanup guidance and avoid actions that stir dust.
When to check official guidance
Use CDC cleanup guidance for enclosed spaces with rodent activity. Ask a public health agency or healthcare professional about a specific exposure concern.
Sources
Hantavirus Now summarizes external public health information in plain language. Source links open in a new tab.