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Radon in Well Water

On a Private Well? Radon Can Come Through the Water, Too.

Testing and treatment for waterborne radon on private wells across Eau Claire County. If your home is on a well, radon in the water is a source worth checking alongside soil radon.

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Radon in Well Water in Eau Claire County

Most radon in homes comes up from the soil — but if your home is on a private well, there's a second pathway worth understanding. Radon dissolves into groundwater as it passes through uranium-bearing rock, and that radon is released into the air of your home whenever you run water — showering, doing laundry, running the dishwasher. Public water systems are treated and aerated so this is rarely an issue, but a private well draws straight from the ground, so waterborne radon can add to the level in the air.

Two different exposures

Radon in water carries two kinds of risk. The larger one is inhalation — radon released from the water into household air adds to what you breathe. A rough rule of thumb used in the field is that roughly 10,000 pCi/L of radon in water can contribute about 1 pCi/L to the air. There's also a smaller ingestion risk from drinking the water directly. Because the air pathway usually dominates, radon-in-water is often investigated when a home already has elevated air radon and is on a well.

Testing the water

Water radon is a separate test from an air test — a water sample is collected carefully (radon escapes if the sample is aerated or left sitting) and analyzed by a lab. If your air radon is high and you're on a well, testing the water tells you whether the well is a meaningful contributor or whether the soil is the whole story. That distinction matters because the fix is completely different.

How waterborne radon is treated

Both are point-of-entry systems — they treat the water where it comes into the house, so every tap benefits, which is what you want when the concern is radon released into household air.

Air first, then water. If you're on a well with high radon, the usual approach is to confirm the air level, and if it's elevated, test the water to see whether the well is contributing. That tells us whether you need soil mitigation, water treatment, or both.

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Answers

Frequently Asked

Should everyone on a well test their water for radon?
It's most worth doing when the home's air radon is already elevated and the home is on a private well. Public water is treated, so waterborne radon is essentially a private-well question.
How does radon in water get into the air I breathe?
Running water — showers, laundry, dishwashing — releases dissolved radon into household air. Roughly 10,000 pCi/L in water can add about 1 pCi/L to the air.
What's the best treatment for radon in water?
Aeration is preferred for higher levels — it strips radon out and vents it safely without concentrating radioactivity. Granular activated carbon suits lower levels.
Is radon in water a drinking-water problem or an air problem?
Mostly an air problem — the inhalation risk from radon released into household air is generally larger than the ingestion risk from drinking it, though both exist.
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