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Pennsylvania Statewide · NRPP-Certified Partner Network

Pennsylvania Has #3 Highest Radon Levels in America. 40% of Homes Need Mitigation.

Pennsylvania's average indoor radon is 8.6 pCi/L — more than double the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L. 40% of Pennsylvania homes tested are elevated. Pennsylvania Radon Experts connects you with NRPP-certified mitigation specialists across 14 Pennsylvania cities. Free quotes within 24 hours · $800–$2,500 typical install · 50–99% radon reduction guaranteed.

  • ✓ NRPP + PA DEP Certified Partner Network
  • ✓ Free Quotes · No Upfront Cost
  • ✓ Pennsylvania Statewide Coverage
8.5
Pennsylvania pCi/L Average (Highest in US)
2 in 5
Pennsylvania Homes With Elevated Radon
14
Pennsylvania Cities in Our Network
NRPP
+ PA DEP Certified Partners
Why we exist

A statewide radon lead-routing network for Pennsylvania homeowners.

Pennsylvania has approximately 150+ certified radon mitigation specialists. Most are small operators without strong online presence. We connect you with the right NRPP-certified, PA DEP-certified specialist for your home — and route your project to a vetted partner in your area within 24 hours.

Pennsylvania Radon Experts is a lead-routing service. All actual radon testing and mitigation work is performed by independent NRPP-certified, PA DEP-certified partner contractors under their own licensing and insurance.

Real Pennsylvania numbers

How Much Does Radon Mitigation Cost in Pennsylvania in 2026?

The honest answer: most Pennsylvania residential mitigation falls between $800 and $2,500 — and that's the all-in installed cost including post-mitigation verification testing. Specific pricing depends on foundation type, system design, and accessibility for venting. Here are the cost ranges that cover 90%+ of Pennsylvania projects.

Pennsylvania Radon Mitigation Cost Ranges by Project Type (2026)
Project TypeTypical Home SizeInstalled CostLead Time
Active sub-slab depressurization (standard)Single-family, full basement$800 – $2,2001–3 weeks
Sub-membrane (crawl space)Single-family, crawl$1,500 – $3,5001–3 weeks
Block-wall depressurizationOlder home (pre-1980)$2,000 – $4,0002–4 weeks
Real estate closing mitigationAny single-family$1,000 – $2,5007–14 days (expedited)
Sump pump radon integrationHome with existing sump$700 – $1,8001–3 weeks
Multi-family / condo unitPer unit$1,200 – $3,5003–6 weeks
Commercial buildingOffice / retail$2,500 – $15,000+4–8 weeks
Post-mitigation verification testing included with every install. Pennsylvania does not require state permits for residential radon mitigation. Lead times vary by season — peak demand October through April.
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Pennsylvania Radon Mitigation Cost — FAQ

Does homeowners insurance cover radon mitigation in Pennsylvania?
No — homeowners insurance does not cover radon mitigation in Pennsylvania or anywhere in the US. Radon mitigation is treated as a property improvement, not a covered loss. Insurance covers sudden, accidental damage; radon exposure is gradual and environmental. Some Pennsylvania lenders offer Energy Efficient Mortgage (EEM) products that can include radon mitigation in the loan amount, but that is financing, not insurance coverage.
Are there Pennsylvania state tax credits for radon mitigation?
Pennsylvania does not offer state tax credits specifically for radon mitigation as of 2026. The federal Section 25C Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit does not currently cover radon mitigation either. If radon mitigation is part of a larger home health/safety renovation, some Pennsylvania weatherization assistance programs (for income-qualified households) may cover or co-fund radon work. Contact the PA DEP Bureau of Radiation Protection at 717-783-3594 for current assistance program eligibility.
Can I finance radon mitigation in Pennsylvania?
Yes. Most NRPP-certified Pennsylvania contractors offer financing through partners like GreenSky or Synchrony with 0% APR promotional terms (typically 6-18 months) for qualified borrowers. FHA Title I home improvement loans and Energy Efficient Mortgage (EEM) products can include radon mitigation in the loan amount. For real estate transactions, mitigation cost is sometimes negotiated as a seller concession or escrow holdback at closing.
Why does radon mitigation cost range from $800 to $2,500 in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania radon mitigation cost varies based on five factors: (1) foundation type — poured concrete is cheapest at $800-$1,400, block-wall is most expensive at $2,000-$4,000; (2) basement size — larger homes need more piping and sealant; (3) suction point access — finished basements requiring drywall repair add cost; (4) venting route — corner-of-house venting is cheapest, through-attic routing adds labor; (5) fan model — premium fans like the RadonAway HP-2190 cost more than entry-level models. Get itemized quotes to understand each line item.
Is radon mitigation cost tax deductible?
For an Pennsylvania primary residence, radon mitigation is generally not tax deductible as an annual expense. However, the cost adds to your home's cost basis, which reduces capital gains tax owed when you sell. For rental and investment properties, radon mitigation is a deductible repair/improvement expense in the year incurred. Consult a CPA for your specific situation — this is general information, not tax advice.
Does FHA require radon mitigation for a home loan in Pennsylvania?
FHA does not currently require radon testing or mitigation for single-family loans in Pennsylvania, but FHA-financed properties commonly trigger lender-required radon testing during inspection because Pennsylvania is in an EPA Radon Zone 1 region. If testing shows elevated radon (>4 pCi/L), FHA appraisers often require mitigation before closing. VA loans have similar lender discretion. USDA Rural Development loans require radon testing on all financed properties as of 2026.

🆓 Haven't tested your Pennsylvania home yet? Get a free test kit first.

Pennsylvania homeowners can request a completely free radon test kit from [PA-EQUIVALENT-FREE-TESTING-TBD] ([PA-equivalent-tbd], in partnership with PA DEP and the Pennsylvania Cancer Coalition). Kits are mailed statewide at no cost. If your test comes back at or above 4.0 pCi/L, that's when Pennsylvania Radon Experts steps in and connects you to an NRPP-certified, PA DEP-certified mitigation specialist below.

Our process

How Does the Pennsylvania Radon Mitigation Process Work?

  1. Submit a free quote request — online form or phone call to (717) 783-3594. We capture your home details and timeline.
  2. Lead qualification — we verify Pennsylvania homeowner status, project scope, and timeline before routing to a partner contractor.
  3. Partner routing — within 4 business hours, your project routes to the NRPP-certified, PA DEP-certified partner contractor in your service area.
  4. On-site assessment — partner contractor visits within 2–7 days for a free site evaluation: foundation type, radon source assessment, system design.
  5. Written quote — itemized estimate including system design, materials, install, and post-mitigation verification testing. Most quotes within 48 hours of site visit.
  6. Schedule install — typical Pennsylvania lead time is 1–3 weeks from accepted quote. Real estate closing timelines can be expedited to 7–14 days.
  7. System installation — typical 4–8 hour install day for sub-slab depressurization. Sub-membrane crawl space systems take 1–2 days.
  8. System activation + initial monitoring — fan activated, manometer installed for ongoing system status visibility.
  9. Post-mitigation verification test — 48–96 hour test starting 24+ hours after activation. EPA recommends confirmation that radon dropped below 4 pCi/L.
  10. Final report + warranty — partner contractor provides written verification report with pre/post pCi/L documentation and warranty terms (typically 5-year fan, lifetime piping).
How we help Pennsylvania homeowners

Test First, Then Choose the Right Mitigation Method for Your Home

Not sure which mitigation method fits your home? In Pennsylvania, your foundation type answers most of it — basement homes use sub-slab depressurization, crawl-space homes use sub-membrane systems, and homes with an existing sump pump can often integrate the mitigation system into the sump for a lower install cost. Submit a free quote and a partner contractor will assess your home and recommend the right method.

Why Pennsylvanians choose us

Six Reasons Pennsylvania Homeowners Use Our Network

🛡

NRPP + PA DEP Certified Partners

Every partner contractor in our network holds active NRPP Radon Mitigation Specialist certification and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection state registration. Pennsylvania requires both for legal radon mitigation work — we verify both before routing leads.

4-Hour Response Standard

Submit your quote request and a certified partner contractor in your area responds within 4 business hours. No back-and-forth phone tag. No 3-day delays. Real-time SMS + email routing keeps the timeline tight — especially important for real estate transactions.

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Full Lifecycle Service

From initial radon testing (charcoal, continuous monitor, or alpha-track) through system design, installation, and post-mitigation verification — our partner network handles every step. One contact, complete project ownership, written verification at completion.

🏠

Real Estate Transaction Ready

Pennsylvania Real Estate Seller Disclosure Law (68 Pa. C.S. § 7301-7315) requires sellers to disclose known radon test results. Most Pennsylvania real estate transactions now include a radon contingency. Our partner network is experienced with closing-timeline mitigations — testing, system install, and verification within typical 30-day windows.

💰

Free, Transparent Quotes

On-site assessment is free. Quotes are itemized line-by-line. Typical Pennsylvania residential mitigation: $800–$2,500. No upfront cost to Pennsylvania homeowners — you only pay the partner contractor after work is complete and verified.

📍

Statewide Pennsylvania Coverage

14 city service areas: Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, State College, Erie, Ames, Scranton, Bethlehem, Altoona, Wilkes-Barre, Reading, York, Lebanon, West Philadelphia, Bethlehem. Statewide coverage via our partner contractor network for any Pennsylvania property.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does radon mitigation cost in Pennsylvania?
Most Pennsylvania radon mitigation systems cost between $800 and $2,500, with the median residential install around $1,400. Sub-slab depressurization (the most common method) typically runs $800-$2,200; crawl space sub-membrane systems run $1,500-$3,500. Cost varies based on foundation type, basement size, radon source location, and accessibility for venting routes.
Why is radon such a problem in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania has the highest average indoor radon levels in the United States — 8.6 pCi/L statewide, more than double the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L. The combination of uranium-bearing Reading Prong gneiss and Appalachian Plateau Devonian shale, fractured Cambrian-Ordovician carbonate karst bedrock, and basement-heavy housing stock makes 2 in 5 Pennsylvania homes test elevated. Pennsylvania winters intensify the problem through the stack effect — heated indoor air rising pulls radon-laden soil gas into basements.
How long does radon mitigation take to install?
Most Pennsylvania residential radon mitigation installs complete in 4-8 hours of on-site work. Sub-slab depressurization typically takes 4-6 hours; crawl space sub-membrane systems take 6-10 hours including vapor barrier installation. Post-installation verification testing requires an additional 48-96 hours to confirm the system has reduced radon below the EPA action level.
Does radon mitigation actually work?
Yes — properly installed active radon mitigation systems reduce indoor radon by 50-99%, with most Pennsylvania installs achieving final readings below 2 pCi/L (well below the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L). Independent post-mitigation verification testing confirms system effectiveness within 48-96 hours of activation. AARST-ANSI standard installs have a 99%+ success rate when verified post-install.
Do I need to test for radon before selling my Pennsylvania home?
Pennsylvania does not require sellers to test for radon, but Pennsylvania Real Estate Seller Disclosure Law (68 Pa. C.S. § 7301-7315) does require disclosure of any known radon test results to buyers. In practice, most Pennsylvania real estate transactions in 2026 include a radon contingency, and buyers commonly request radon testing as part of inspection. Sellers who test and mitigate proactively often close faster and avoid renegotiation.
How do I know if my Pennsylvania home needs radon mitigation?
Test first. The only way to know your radon level is to test. EPA recommends short-term tests (2-7 days) for initial screening and long-term tests (90+ days) for confirmation. If results exceed 4 pCi/L, EPA recommends mitigation. If results are between 2-4 pCi/L, EPA recommends considering mitigation given Pennsylvania's high background levels. Most Pennsylvania homeowners should test every 2 years and after any major foundation work.
What credentials should an Pennsylvania radon mitigation contractor have?
Pennsylvania requires radon mitigation contractors to hold BOTH national NRPP (National Radon Proficiency Program) certification AND state Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP) registration. The contractor should also carry general liability insurance of at least $1M and follow AARST-ANSI installation standards. You can verify NRPP certification at nrpp.info and Pennsylvania state licensing through the PA DEP Bureau of Radiation Protection (717-783-3594).
What's the difference between radon testing and radon mitigation?
Radon testing measures the radon level in your home — typically using a 2-7 day short-term test or 90+ day long-term test. Radon mitigation is the installation of a system to reduce elevated radon levels. You test first to determine if mitigation is needed; mitigation is the engineering solution if test results exceed the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L.
Is radon really dangerous?
Yes. Radon is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in the United States after smoking, responsible for approximately 21,000 deaths annually according to the EPA. Pennsylvania's highest-in-the-nation radon levels mean Pennsylvanians face elevated lung cancer risk compared to other states. Children, smokers, and people with respiratory conditions face proportionally higher risk from chronic radon exposure.
How long does a radon mitigation system last?
The piping and structural components of an Pennsylvania radon mitigation system typically last 20+ years. The radon fan (the active component) has a typical lifespan of 5-10 years depending on the model and continuous operation. Fans should be tested annually and replaced when failed. The overall system should be verified with a follow-up radon test every 2 years.
How is Pennsylvania Radon Experts different from a mitigation contractor?
Pennsylvania Radon Experts is a lead-routing service that connects Pennsylvania homeowners with NRPP-certified and PA DEP-certified radon mitigation specialists across 14 Pennsylvania cities. We do not perform radon testing or mitigation directly — all work is performed by our certified partner contractors operating under their own licensing and insurance. We're the marketing and qualification layer; the partners are the trade professionals.
Can I install a radon mitigation system myself?
Pennsylvania state law requires that radon mitigation work be performed by an PA DEP-certified contractor. DIY radon mitigation kits exist but are illegal to use for compliance purposes in Pennsylvania, void most real estate transaction requirements, and rarely achieve the reduction performance of professionally-installed systems. For real estate transactions, lender requirements, or insurance purposes, professional installation is required.
Pennsylvania service areas

Pennsylvania Service Areas We Cover

Pennsylvania Radon Experts routes radon mitigation requests to NRPP-certified, PA DEP-certified partner contractors across 14 Pennsylvania cities, with statewide partner coverage available. Click any city for location-specific radon data — county averages, EPA zone classification, and local geology.

Philadelphia , PA
1,603,797 residents · 6.8 pCi/L avg
35% elevated · Philadelphia County
View Philadelphia radon data →
Pittsburgh , PA
302,971 residents · 8.4 pCi/L avg
45% elevated · Allegheny County
View Pittsburgh radon data →
Allentown , PA
125,845 residents · 9.2 pCi/L avg
50% elevated · Lehigh County
View Allentown radon data →
Erie , PA
93,958 residents · 7.1 pCi/L avg
38% elevated · Erie County
View Erie radon data →
Reading , PA
95,112 residents · 9.8 pCi/L avg
55% elevated · Berks County
View Reading radon data →
Scranton , PA
75,806 residents · 7.3 pCi/L avg
40% elevated · Lackawanna County
View Scranton radon data →
Bethlehem , PA
75,781 residents · 9.4 pCi/L avg
51% elevated · Northampton County
View Bethlehem radon data →
Lancaster , PA
58,039 residents · 8.7 pCi/L avg
47% elevated · Lancaster County
View Lancaster radon data →
Harrisburg , PA
50,099 residents · 8.1 pCi/L avg
44% elevated · Dauphin County
View Harrisburg radon data →
York , PA
44,800 residents · 8.6 pCi/L avg
46% elevated · York County
View York radon data →
Wilkes-Barre , PA
44,328 residents · 7.6 pCi/L avg
41% elevated · Luzerne County
View Wilkes-Barre radon data →
Altoona , PA
43,781 residents · 7.4 pCi/L avg
40% elevated · Blair County
View Altoona radon data →
State College , PA
40,501 residents · 8.9 pCi/L avg
48% elevated · Centre County
View State College radon data →
Lebanon , PA
26,241 residents · 8.3 pCi/L avg
45% elevated · Lebanon County
View Lebanon radon data →

Get a Free Pennsylvania Radon Quote in 24 Hours

Call (717) 783-3594 for same-day routing to an NRPP-certified Pennsylvania partner, or submit a quote request online. Quote response within 24 hours of submission. Free on-site assessment. No upfront cost.

📞 (717) 783-3594 Get a Free Quote
Cross-section diagram of an Pennsylvania home showing topsoil, uranium-bearing Reading Prong gneiss and Appalachian Plateau Devonian shale, and fractured Cambrian-Ordovician carbonate karst bedrock. Yellow arrows show radon gas rising from bedrock through soil layers and accumulating in the basement above.
Pennsylvania's hidden geology

Why Does Pennsylvania Have the Highest Radon Levels in America?

Pennsylvania sits on a combination of geological conditions that produce more indoor radon than anywhere else in the United States:

  1. Uranium-rich Reading Prong soils blanket most of the state — the natural decay of uranium produces radon gas continuously.
  2. Fractured limestone bedrock in eastern Pennsylvania's Appalachian Plateau region provides radon transport pathways directly into homes.
  3. Basement-heavy housing stock — most Pennsylvania homes have full basements, the lowest level where radon concentrates.
  4. Cold-winter stack effect intensifies radon entry. Heated indoor air rising pulls soil gas — including radon — into the basement at higher rates than warmer climates.

The result: Pennsylvania's statewide indoor radon average is 8.6 pCi/L, more than double the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L and roughly 6.6x the national average of 1.3 pCi/L.

📞 Get a Free Radon Quote
County radon data

How High Are Radon Levels in Your Pennsylvania County?

Every Pennsylvania county is classified as EPA Radon Zone 1 (highest risk). These are the indoor radon averages and elevated-home percentages for the 14 cities we serve, sorted by severity.

Average Indoor Radon by Pennsylvania County (2026 data)
CityCountyAverage pCi/L% Homes ElevatedEPA Zone
ReadingBerks County9.855%Zone 1
BethlehemNorthampton County9.451%Zone 1
AllentownLehigh County9.250%Zone 1
State CollegeCentre County8.948%Zone 1
LancasterLancaster County8.747%Zone 1
YorkYork County8.646%Zone 1
PittsburghAllegheny County8.445%Zone 1
LebanonLebanon County8.345%Zone 1
HarrisburgDauphin County8.144%Zone 1
Wilkes-BarreLuzerne County7.641%Zone 1
AltoonaBlair County7.440%Zone 1
ScrantonLackawanna County7.340%Zone 1
ErieErie County7.138%Zone 1
PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia County6.835%Zone 2
EPA action level is 4.0 pCi/L. All 14 cities exceed it on average — meaning the typical Pennsylvania home in any of these markets benefits from radon mitigation. Source: PA DEP Bureau of Radiation Protection county-level data.
Decision helper

Which Radon Mitigation System Is Right for Your Pennsylvania Home?

Five mitigation methods cover 95% of Pennsylvania homes. Foundation type drives the choice — your partner contractor confirms during the initial assessment.

Radon Mitigation System Types — When Each Applies
System TypeFoundation MatchTypical CostEffectivenessBest For
Active Sub-Slab Depressurization (ASD)Poured-concrete basement$800 – $2,20070–99% reductionMost Pennsylvania homes (~80% use this)
Sub-Membrane DepressurizationCrawl space$1,500 – $3,50070–95% reductionCrawl space homes (~15% of Pennsylvania)
Block-Wall DepressurizationHollow block-wall foundation$2,000 – $4,00060–90% reductionOlder Pennsylvania homes (pre-1980)
Drain-Tile DepressurizationHomes with perimeter drain tile$1,500 – $3,50070–95% reductionNewer Pennsylvania homes with drain systems
Passive System RetrofitNew construction passive ready$500 – $1,50040–70% reductionActivating builder-installed passive lines
Cost varies with system complexity, accessibility, and venting requirements. All systems include post-install verification testing to confirm reduction below the 4 pCi/L EPA action level.
The science · animated infographic

How Does a Radon Mitigation System Actually Work?

A radon mitigation system creates negative pressure beneath your home's foundation, intercepting radon gas from Pennsylvania's uranium-rich soil before it enters your living space. The 4-step infographic below shows exactly how the system protects your home 24/7.

How a Radon Mitigation System Works — Pennsylvania Radon Experts Step-by-step infographic showing how an active radon mitigation system protects your home. Radon gas rises from uranium-rich Pennsylvania Reading Prong geology through cracks in the foundation. A PVC pipe and sealed suction point collect the gas from beneath the slab. A continuous-duty fan creates negative pressure, drawing radon up through the pipe. The radon is then safely vented above the roofline where it disperses into outdoor air. The system runs 24/7 for continuous protection. HOW A RADON MITIGATION SYSTEM WORKS A radon mitigation system continuously protects your home by safely venting radon gas from beneath your home to the outside. CONTINUOUS PROTECTION The system runs 24/7 to protect your family. 24/7 1 2 3 4 1 RADON ENTERS Radon gas in Pennsylvania soil moves upward and enters the home through cracks and openings in the foundation slab. 2 SYSTEM COLLECTION A sealed PVC pipe and suction point collect radon-laden soil gas from beneath the foundation slab before it can enter the living space. 3 FAN ACTIVATION A continuous-duty radon fan creates negative pressure in the system, drawing radon-laden gas up through the PVC pipe — running 24/7. 4 SAFE VENTING Radon is vented above the roofline per EPA requirements (10 ft above grade, 10 ft from any opening) where it disperses harmlessly outdoors. RADON GAS Invisible. Odorless. Dangerous. DRAWN UP Captured & pulled into the system. VENTED OUTSIDE Safely released above the roofline. PROTECTING WHAT MATTERS 24/7 protection for a healthier home.
How an Active Sub-Slab Depressurization (ASD) Radon Mitigation System Works. A continuous-duty radon fan creates negative pressure beneath your foundation slab, intercepting radon gas from Pennsylvania's Reading Prong geology before it enters your home and venting it safely above the roofline per EPA placement standards. Animated arrows show real-time soil gas flow (green, into the system) and safe exhaust dispersion (blue, above grade). System runs 24/7 for continuous protection — 50–99% radon reduction guaranteed.
Read the Complete Technical Guide →
Beyond residential

Commercial, Multi-Family, and Real Estate Radon Services

Our partner network includes specialists certified for higher-complexity radon scenarios beyond standard single-family mitigation.

🏢

Multi-Family Buildings

Apartment buildings, condos, and townhome developments require unit-by-unit testing and building-scale mitigation design. Partner contractors hold AARST-ANSI Multi-Family Measurement (MFM) and Multi-Family Mitigation (MFMT) certifications.

🏛

HUD Compliance Projects

Federally-funded multi-family housing must meet HUD radon testing and mitigation standards. Our partner network handles compliance testing, mitigation design per HUD specifications, and required documentation for ongoing federal funding.

🏗

New Construction RRNC

Radon Resistant New Construction (RRNC) builds passive mitigation into the foundation during construction — significantly cheaper than retrofitting later. Partner specialists work directly with Pennsylvania builders on RRNC-spec foundations.

🔑

Real Estate Transactions

Pre-purchase testing, sell-side disclosure compliance, and closing-timeline mitigation — typical 7–14 day turnaround from test to verified install. Pennsylvania real estate radon contingencies handled.

🏫

School District Testing

Pennsylvania law (Title 28 Pa. Code § 27.31) recommends schools test to test all ground-contact occupied spaces every 5 years. Partner network provides compliant testing, mitigation design, and AARST-ANSI-standard installation for school facilities.

⚠️

Vapor Intrusion Remediation

Brownfield sites and commercial buildings on contaminated land require sub-slab depressurization paired with vapor intrusion controls. Partner network includes specialists certified for combined radon + VOC mitigation.

Complete Pennsylvania radon guides

Read Our Complete Pennsylvania Radon Guides

Deep-dive guides on every aspect of radon mitigation in Pennsylvania — from how systems work to choosing a certified contractor.