SERVICE — MITIGATION

Radon mitigation in Danbury, CT

If your home tested at or above 4.0 pCi/L, mitigation is the fix. Here's exactly what that means, what it costs, and what to expect.

How a mitigation system works

The standard fix is sub-slab depressurization: a suction point is cored through your basement floor or slab, connected to PVC piping and a continuously running fan that pulls radon-laden soil gas from beneath the foundation and vents it above the roofline — before it ever enters your living space.

It's the method the EPA recommends because it works: properly installed systems routinely bring homes from double-digit readings to well under the action level.

A typical install includes

  • Suction point and sealed penetration through the slab
  • Schedule-40 PVC routing, interior or exterior
  • Continuously rated radon fan sized to your foundation
  • Manometer gauge so you can see the system working at a glance
  • Sealing of major slab cracks and sump openings
  • Post-installation retest to verify results
Typical cost$900–$2,500 depending on foundation and layout
Install timeUsually under one day
FoundationsBasements, slab-on-grade, crawl spaces, sump/drain-tile homes
Operating costComparable to running a small light bulb continuously
VerificationFollow-up radon test after the system runs

Not sure you need mitigation?

Start with a test. If your number comes back under the action level, that's the whole answer.

Radon testing options →

Every foundation type has a fix

Basements & slabs

The classic case for sub-slab depressurization. A single suction point handles most homes; larger footprints or slabs poured in sections sometimes need a second point to reach full coverage. If the home has a sump pit, the system can often draw from the pit itself with a sealed lid — an efficient, tidy install.

Crawl spaces

Exposed-soil crawl spaces use sub-membrane depressurization: heavy plastic sheeting is sealed over the soil, and the fan draws from beneath the membrane. It's the same principle — intercept the gas before it reaches your air — adapted to the construction.

Drain-tile & French drain homes

Homes with perimeter drain tile can often use it as a ready-made collection network, giving one suction point reach around the entire foundation. These are frequently the best-performing systems of all.

Combination foundations

Plenty of Fairfield County homes mix a basement with a slab addition or crawl space. The system is designed for the whole footprint, which is exactly what the on-site assessment works out before you get a price.

What moves the price within the $900–$2,500 range

Four things, mainly: the foundation type and whether more than one suction point is needed; the pipe route (a straight run up an exterior wall costs less than snaking through finished living space); the fan size your soil conditions call for; and how much sealing the slab needs. What shouldn't move the price: surprises after the quote. The assessment exists so the number you approve is the number you pay.

Mitigation questions, answered

Will the system be loud or ugly?

Modern radon fans run at a low hum most homeowners stop noticing within days. Piping can often be routed through a garage, closet, or exterior wall to keep it discreet.

Does mitigation really work in older Danbury homes?

Yes — older foundations sometimes need an extra suction point or additional sealing, which is exactly what the on-site assessment determines before you get your quote.

What happens if the retest is still high?

The system gets adjusted — larger fan, added suction point, more sealing — until the number comes down. The retest is part of the job, not an extra.

NEXT STEP

Find out what's in your air

Call now for a straight answer on testing and pricing — no pressure, no jargon.

Call (475) 473-9647
Call (475) 473-9647 — free quote