Loveland Radon Mitigation (970) 536-1157

Home / FAQ

Loveland radon questions, answered plainly

The things Northern Colorado homeowners actually ask — about the geology, the money, the deadlines, and the myths. Anything missing, call (970) 536-1157.

The Colorado situation

Why is radon such a big deal here specifically?

Geology. The Rockies are largely granite, granite carries uranium, and the soils of the Front Range are what erosion made of that granite. Uranium decays to radon gas, which rises into the buildings above. Statewide, roughly one home in two tests at or above the EPA action level — several times the national rate — and every Colorado county carries the EPA's highest risk rating.

Do mountain homes and mesa homes differ from town homes?

Levels vary house to house everywhere — a walkout up the Big Thompson canyon can test lower than a sealed basement in town, or ten times higher. Foundation contact with soil, construction tightness, and pure geological luck dominate. Location predicts nothing; only a test does.

Is radon really dangerous or is this inspection theater?

It's the leading cause of lung cancer among people who never smoked — about 21,000 U.S. deaths a year per the EPA. The risk builds over years of exposure, which is why Colorado's high baseline matters and why a permanent fix beats worrying.

What's a "safe" radon level?

There's no proven-safe threshold; lower is better. The working numbers: 4.0 pCi/L is the EPA action level, 2.7 is the WHO reference, 0.4 is typical outdoor air. Mitigated Colorado homes usually land under 2.0, often well under.

Money & process

What will a system cost me in Loveland?

Most installs: $1,100–$1,900. Sump-lid systems price at the low end; multi-point or crawlspace-membrane systems at the high end. The quote is firm and written. Running cost is a light bulb's worth of electricity.

How disruptive is the install?

One working day, one small cored hole, a pipe route you approved beforehand, and a fan you'll forget exists. Verification testing follows 24–48 hours later.

Who's allowed to do this work in Colorado?

State-licensed radon professionals — Colorado requires licensure for both measurement and mitigation, tied to national ANSI-AARST standards. Ask for the license; anyone legitimate is glad you did.

Will a system help my home's value?

In this market, meaningfully. Larimer County buyers test almost by default, and a documented system with a passing verification removes the most common re-negotiation lever before it appears. "Radon mitigated" shows up in listing copy here for a reason.

Houses & myths

Our home is brand new with a passive system — done, right?

Test it anyway. Passive stacks help but frequently aren't enough on our soils. The happy part: if a radon-ready home tests high, activation (adding a fan to the existing stack) is the fastest, cheapest fix in the industry.

The neighbors tested at 1.9 — doesn't that cover us?

No. Two houses sharing a fence line routinely differ several-fold. Soil pockets, slab cracks, sump layouts, and house "breathing" are all yours alone.

Can't I just crack a basement window?

In January? Ventilation dilutes radon only while it's happening, then levels rebound within hours. It's not a strategy — it's a draft. Reversing soil-gas entry at the slab is the durable fix.

Do air purifiers or plants help?

No. Radon is a noble gas — filters, purifiers, and greenery don't capture it. Only reducing entry (mitigation) or dilution (ventilation, temporarily) moves the number.

Is the risk higher because we also get altitude radiation jokes?

Cosmic background at altitude is a rounding error next to a 10 pCi/L basement. If you want to reduce radiation exposure in Colorado, radon is the lever that matters — and the only one with a one-day fix.

Real estate

Buyer's test came back at 7 — is my sale in danger?

Almost certainly not. This is among the most common findings in Northern Colorado inspections. The standard resolution — seller installs or credits, verification test before closing — fits inside a normal contract timeline. Bring us the closing date and we schedule backwards.

The house we're buying already has a system. What do we check?

The post-install verification number, the manometer showing live suction, the fan's age (about a decade of life), and your own retest after moving in. If it's crept up, diagnosis is usually minor — not a new system.

Should we test before listing our home?

Smart sellers here increasingly do. A pre-listing test plus, if needed, a mitigation you control on your own schedule beats a mid-contract scramble on the buyer's terms — and the passing number becomes marketing.

Get your free quote

Tell us about your home and we'll get back to you fast — or skip the form and call (970) 536-1157.

  • Free, no-obligation estimates
  • Serving Loveland and all of Siouxland
  • Post-install retest to confirm your levels dropped

Call (970) 536-1157