Review the test
Note the result, test type, location, dates and any real-estate deadline.
Clear air starts below the house
Understand the result, see how mitigation works, and prepare a useful request for a Lincoln-area radon professional.
No phone number is published until verified call routing is active.
What happens next
Note the result, test type, location, dates and any real-estate deadline.
A professional evaluates the slab, crawl space, foundation and a practical vent route.
The system creates suction below the home; follow-up testing confirms the result.
Lincoln context
50%+
Nebraska DHHS says more than half of radon tests in the state are above the EPA action level. That is useful context—not a prediction for your address.
Focused help
Learn what a system does and what changes with foundation design.
See mitigation options →Understand why layout, routing and sealing affect an estimate.
Review cost factors →Share the information a provider needs, with no fake instant estimate.
Start your request →The core idea
Most systems create negative pressure beneath a slab or membrane. A fan carries soil gas through sealed piping and releases it above the roof, away from openings.
Questions homeowners ask
The EPA recommends fixing a home at 4 pCi/L or higher and considering action between 2 and 4 pCi/L. A test is the only way to know the level in a specific home.
Active soil depressurization is the most common approach. The right design depends on the foundation, airflow pathways and test result, and a post-mitigation test verifies performance.
Nebraska DHHS reports that more than half of radon tests statewide exceed 4 pCi/L. That context makes testing sensible, but it cannot predict an individual home.
Tell us about the property and your test result. We’ll use it to understand what kind of help you need.