Radon testing

Radon Testing in Monmouth County, NJ

Radon cannot be seen, smelled, or tasted, so a test is the only practical way to know whether a home has elevated radon. NJDEP recommends that all homes be tested, and both NJDEP and EPA recommend mitigation when results are 4.0 pCi/L or higher.

When to call

Signals that deserve a radon next step.

Homeowner decision guide

Questions to settle before spending on repair.

Monmouth County context

Why local conditions change the next step.

NJDEP municipality tiers, foundation type, lower-level use, and real-estate timing can all change how quickly a radon result needs attention. The actual home test still controls the decision.

How it works

Practical steps before repair decisions.

  1. Identify the reason for testing: first test, real estate, retest, or post-mitigation check
  2. Place the test in the lowest livable level under proper conditions
  3. Keep closed-house conditions for short-term tests as required by the test protocol
  4. Read the result in pCi/L and compare it with the 4.0 pCi/L action level
  5. Route 4.0+ results toward mitigation planning or seller-credit discussion

Related services

Nearby Monmouth towns

Town examples

Where this service commonly matters.

These are focused Monmouth County examples, not doorway pages. Each one ties a radon service to a real homeowner or real-estate decision pattern.

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.

Request routing

FAQ

Common homeowner questions

What level of radon needs action?

EPA and NJDEP recommend taking action to mitigate a home when the result is 4.0 pCi/L or higher.

Can I use a hardware-store test kit?

For personal screening, many homeowners use store-bought kits. For hired testing in New Jersey, use an NJDEP-certified radon business or technician.

Where should the test be placed?

NJDEP guidance says testing should be done in the lowest livable level of the home, such as an unfinished basement that could be used as living space, but not a crawl space.

Does a low town tier mean I can skip testing?

No. NJDEP recommends testing all homes because radon can vary from house to house, even within the same municipality.

Monmouth radon intake Request routing