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Radon Mitigation Systems

Got a High Radon Result? Here's How We Fix It.

Active sub-slab depressurization mitigation systems installed across Eau Claire County. We bring your radon down below the EPA action level and prove it with a post-installation test.

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Radon Mitigation in Eau Claire County

Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that seeps up out of the soil and into homes through the foundation. You can't see it or smell it, and the only way to know your level is to test — but once a test comes back high, the fix is well-established and highly effective. The U.S. EPA recommends taking action to reduce radon at 4.0 pCi/L (picocuries per liter) or higher, and suggests considering a fix between 2.0 and 4.0. A properly designed mitigation system reliably brings most homes well below that action level.

How radon gets into a home

Radon comes from the natural breakdown of uranium in soil and rock. The gas moves up through the ground and, because a heated house is slightly lower in pressure than the soil around it, the home actually draws that soil gas in — through cracks in the slab, floor-wall joints, sump pits, crawlspaces, and around plumbing penetrations. That's why radon collects in the lowest levels of a house, and why the fix focuses on the foundation.

Active sub-slab depressurization — the proven method

The most common and effective mitigation method is active sub-slab depressurization (ASD). The idea is straightforward: instead of letting the house pull radon in, we create a zone of lower pressure under the slab so the gas is drawn away before it ever enters the living space. A typical system involves:

Foundation type changes the design

Not every home takes the same system. A poured basement slab is the textbook case for sub-slab depressurization. A crawlspace is usually handled with sub-membrane depressurization — a sealed heavy plastic membrane laid over the soil with suction drawn beneath it. Homes with multiple foundation types (a slab addition off a basement, say) sometimes need more than one suction point or more than one system. Part of the job is looking at your specific foundation and designing the system that will actually pull the level down.

We confirm it worked. A mitigation system isn't finished until a post-mitigation radon test shows the level actually dropped below the action level. Reputable radon work always includes that follow-up test — it's the proof, not a formality.

What drives the cost

There's no single price because no two homes are identical. The factors that move the number: foundation type (a simple basement slab is the low end; crawlspaces and mixed foundations cost more), how far the vent pipe has to travel to reach above the roofline, how many suction points the home needs to hit the target level, and whether the routing is interior (through closets/garage) or exterior. We look at the home and give you a real number before any work begins.

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Got a high test result or a deadline? Tell us what's going on and we'll help you get it handled.

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Answers

Frequently Asked

What radon level requires mitigation?
The EPA recommends fixing at 4.0 pCi/L or higher and considering a fix between 2.0 and 4.0. There is no completely safe level, but 4.0 is the widely used action threshold.
How long does a mitigation system take to install?
A typical single-family system is often installed in a day. Homes with crawlspaces, multiple foundations, or difficult routing take longer. We give you a realistic timeline up front.
Will the system lower my radon guaranteed?
A properly designed sub-slab system brings the large majority of homes well below 4.0 pCi/L, and we confirm it with a post-mitigation test. If the first design doesn't fully hit target, additional suction points or adjustments are made.
Is the fan loud or expensive to run?
Radon fans are designed to run continuously and quietly, and they draw only modest electricity — comparable to a light bulb. The manometer lets you confirm at a glance it's working.
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