Independent radon guidance and quote requests for Lincoln-area homeowners

Clear air starts below the house

A practical next step after a high radon test.

Understand the result, see how mitigation works, and prepare a useful request for a Lincoln-area radon professional.

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What happens next

From test result to verified reduction

01

Review the test

Note the result, test type, location, dates and any real-estate deadline.

02

Assess the building

A professional evaluates the slab, crawl space, foundation and a practical vent route.

03

Install and retest

The system creates suction below the home; follow-up testing confirms the result.

Lincoln context

Nebraska’s statewide data makes testing worth taking seriously.

50%+

Nebraska DHHS says more than half of radon tests in the state are above the EPA action level. That is useful context—not a prediction for your address.

Review Nebraska DHHS radon guidance →

Bring these details to a quote

  • Your latest radon result and test duration
  • Foundation type and finished areas
  • Approximate home age
  • Real-estate or project deadline
  • Photos of possible utility/vent routes

Focused help

Three useful starting points

How a radon mitigation system moves soil gas away from a homeA pipe draws air from below the basement slab, a fan pulls it upward, and the vent terminates above the roof.Living spaceLowest levelInline fanDischarge above roofSoil gas collection point

The core idea

Move radon before it enters the living space.

Most systems create negative pressure beneath a slab or membrane. A fan carries soil gas through sealed piping and releases it above the roof, away from openings.

How a Lincoln radon mitigation system is planned →

Questions homeowners ask

Direct answers, grounded in public guidance

What radon level should prompt action?

The EPA recommends fixing a home at 4 pCi/L or higher and considering action between 2 and 4 pCi/L. A test is the only way to know the level in a specific home.

Can a radon system reduce elevated levels?

Active soil depressurization is the most common approach. The right design depends on the foundation, airflow pathways and test result, and a post-mitigation test verifies performance.

Is Lincoln a high-radon area?

Nebraska DHHS reports that more than half of radon tests statewide exceed 4 pCi/L. That context makes testing sensible, but it cannot predict an individual home.

Turn your result into a useful conversation.

Tell us about the property and your test result. We’ll use it to understand what kind of help you need.

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