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In the winter, typically the levels are lower than this due to central heating drying the air.
It sounds like a dehumidifier might be needed - 80% is very high.
Keeping a guitar in a case protects it from rapid changes in humidity but it won't keep it at the right level if the room it's in is constantly too humid.
Now I use a decent dehumidifier in my music room with an auto function that keeps the RH where I want it for as long as I want it. I don't run it all the time, but when I don't, my guitars are in their (virtually airtight) cases. My guitars go out to gigs and festivals where I have no control over the humidity and I don't obsess about that, but I make sure that they always come back to a nice controlled environment before too long.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/DAddario-PW-HTK-01-Humiditrak-Instrument-Humidity/dp/B019JD0XZ0
I keep my Martin D28 hung on the wall at home and the action crept up a bit after 4-5 months and I fitted a new Martin bridge saddle that I shaved down to get the action to where I wanted it.
I put this down to the top settling under string tension after manufacture and is something I have experienced wth every acoustic I have owned.
As for the top on your guitar, I would have expected a slight 'bellying' of the top rather than a dip if the action has increased?
I measured the action on my D28 from new at 7/64ths - 5/64ths and it crept up 1/64th after a few months. With the new bridge saddle fitted it is now nearer 6/64ths and has not changed. Did you measure the action from new and compare to now on yours?
Where I live is situated between 2 reservoirs. It's really damp throughout most of the year but in winter time it gets really bad.
My house averages around 65-70% RH.
Buy a couple of hygrometers. They tend to be cheap, so 2 won't break the bank. Having 2 means you can make sure the readings are consistent with each other (they're not the most reliable piece of tech so it's worth having a couple).
Get a dehumidifier like Lewy suggested. I've done the same, and have one with a hydrostat that switches off the unit when the desired RH is reached. I tend to keep it set to 45% at this time of year. Once it goes on it takes about a day or two to sort the house out, where it runs pretty much constantly. Then it will just turn on as and when.
Dehumidifiers aren't cheap (decent ones), but they are a lot cheaper than buying a new guitar or getting one fixed properly.
You our should also find the air quality in your house improves, so it's a win win.
Hope you get the Martin sorted.
I can't help about the shape I'm in, I can't sing I ain't pretty and my legs are thin
But don't ask me what I think of you, I might not give the answer that you want me to