Radon Testing in Covington
Short-term (48-hour) testing for real-estate transactions or initial screening, plus 90-day long-term testing for the most accurate picture of household exposure. Our Cincinnati technicians are NRSB- or NRPP-credentialed. PDF reports compatible with mortgage and inspection requirements. Covington sits within our service area for Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, with same-week scheduling typical for routine jobs.
Typical pricing in Covington
$150-$300
Pricing varies by job specifics. Free phone or on-site quotes; fixed pricing after our technician has assessed the job.
Radon Testing in Covington: pre-war urban Kenton County foundations and Cincinnati Arch geology
Radon Testing in Covington involves short-term (2-7 day) charcoal canister or continuous radon monitor placement on the lowest occupied level, working on the lowest lived-in level of the home where occupants spend more than 4 hours per day. The service is the first step for any home that has not been tested in the last 2 years, for any home being sold, and for any home after a significant foundation, basement, or HVAC modification.
Covington's residential core is 1850s-1920s row housing, single-family, and the historic MainStrasse district. Plaster walls, stone or early-brick foundations, and the dense urban grid character of the largest NKY river city. River-corridor and Licking-River-confluence proximity drives the moisture profile. Covington sits on the Cincinnati Arch geology (fractured Ordovician limestone and shale) that drives elevated regional radon exposure across the entire Greater Cincinnati metro, including Kenton County.
ANSI/AARST MAH-2023 establishes the residential measurement protocol. Closed-house conditions must be maintained throughout short-term testing. The Kentucky Radon Program (Cabinet for Health and Family Services) oversees radon program compliance for Covington, and the Kentucky Radon Program requires NRPP or NRSB certification for residential mitigation work.
- County
- Kenton, KY
- Geology
- Cincinnati Arch (Ordovician limestone and shale)
- EPA action level
- 4.0 pCi/L on long-term average
- Service category
- Testing