The strong affinity of water to zeolite adsorbents has made adsorption of CO2 from humid gas mixtures such as flue gas nearly impossible under equilibrated conditions. Here, in this manuscript, we describe a unique cooperative adsorption mechanism between H2O and Cs+ cations on Cs-RHO zeolite, which actually facilitates the equilibrium adsorption of CO2 under humid conditions. Our data demonstrate that, at a relative humidity of 5%, Cs-RHO adsorbs 3-fold higher amounts of CO2 relative to dry conditions, at a temperature of 30 °C and CO2 pressure of 1 bar. A comparative investigation of univalent cation-exchanged RHO zeolites with H+, Li+, Na+, K+, Rb+, and Cs+ shows an increase of equilibrium CO2 adsorption under humid versus dry conditions to be unique to Cs-RHO. In situ powder X-ray diffraction indicates the appearance of a new phase with Im3̅m symmetry after H2O saturation of Cs-RHO. A mixed-cation exchanged NaCs-RHO exhibits similar phase transitions after humid CO2 adsorption; however, we found no evidence of cooperativity between Cs+ and Na+ cations in adsorption, in single-component H2O and CO2 adsorption. We hypothesize based on previous Rietveld refinements of CO2 adsorption in Cs-RHO zeolite that the observed phase change is related to solvation of extra-framework Cs+ cations by H2O. In the case of Cs-RHO, molecular modeling results suggest that hydration of these cations favors their migration from an original D8R position to S8R sites. We posit that this movement enables a trapdoor mechanism by which CO2 can interact with Cs+ at S8R sites to access the α-cage.