Freehold, New Jersey
Radon Testing in Freehold, NJ
In Freehold, radon testing is a practical first step for older homes, finished basements, and real-estate transactions because NJDEP tier data identifies Freehold Township as high potential, and Freehold-area addresses should not rely on assumptions.
Local context
Why this problem shows up here.
Freehold combines older borough housing, larger township homes, basements, and active real-estate turnover. A radon result can become a contract decision quickly.
NJDEP 2015 data lists Freehold Township as Tier 1, high radon potential; verify municipality-specific details for Freehold Borough if the address distinction matters.
Decision guidance
Do not guess from a town tier.
Do not treat the town tier as a home result. Use a properly placed test, then move 4.0 pCi/L or higher results into mitigation planning with an NJ-certified provider.
Use the home test result, not the county reputation, to decide next steps. Verify NJDEP certification before hiring testing or mitigation work.
When to call
Signals that deserve a radon next step.
- You are buying or selling in Freehold and need a documented radon result
- A basement or lower-level room is used regularly
- A previous test was old, informal, or missing
- The result is near or above 4.0 pCi/L and timing matters
Local homeowner notes
Details that make the call more useful.
- Ask where the test will be placed and how closed-house conditions will be handled.
- Keep the report with inspection or home maintenance records.
- If a mitigation quote is needed, share the result, foundation type, and deadline.
What to say on the call
Make the first conversation specific.
For Freehold radon testing requests, mention the test result in pCi/L if available, the lowest livable level tested, any real-estate deadline, and whether mitigation or post-mitigation retesting is already in play.
- Town: Freehold, NJ, plus the property type if it affects testing or mitigation.
- Radon number: pCi/L result, test date, and whether this was a short-term, long-term, or post-mitigation test.
- Prior work: previous tests, mitigation system, fan repairs, or quote details.
- Constraints: closing date, finished basement, HOA rules, crawlspace, slab, sump, or multiple foundation areas.
How it works
Practical steps before repair decisions.
- Identify the reason for testing: first test, real estate, retest, or post-mitigation check
- Place the test in the lowest livable level under proper conditions
- Keep closed-house conditions for short-term tests as required by the test protocol
- Read the result in pCi/L and compare it with the 4.0 pCi/L action level
- Route 4.0+ results toward mitigation planning or seller-credit discussion
Related services
Nearby Monmouth towns
Clear next step
Request Monmouth County radon testing or mitigation routing.
Use this for first tests, real-estate deadlines, 4.0+ pCi/L results, mitigation planning, and post-mitigation retests.
Requests are routed only where an appropriate NJ-certified provider is available.
FAQ
Common homeowner questions
Is Freehold a high radon potential area?
NJDEP 2015 tier data lists Freehold Township as Tier 1, high potential. Individual homes still need their own test, and borough/township distinctions should be verified for address-specific questions.
What result triggers mitigation planning?
EPA and NJDEP recommend mitigation when a test result is 4.0 pCi/L or higher.
Should Freehold sellers pre-test?
It can reduce surprise during inspection, especially when the basement or lowest livable level is important to buyers.
What does the NJDEP radon tier mean for Freehold?
NJDEP 2015 data lists Freehold Township as Tier 1, high radon potential; verify municipality-specific details for Freehold Borough if the address distinction matters. The tier is a priority signal, not a result for an individual home.
What happens after I request help?
The request is reviewed for town, service type, result, and deadline, then routed only where an appropriate NJ-certified local provider is available.