Do You Need a Permit to Install a Radon Mitigation System?

The short answer: usually no building permit, but often yes to an electrical permit. Here's the state-by-state breakdown — plus the most important question to ask your local building department.

The Rule That Covers Most Homeowners Most U.S. states do not require a statewide building permit for installing a radon mitigation system in an existing single-family home. However, most municipalities require an electrical permit when a new circuit or outlet is installed for the radon fan. Your contractor should pull this permit — not you.

Two Types of Permits to Know About

When homeowners ask "do I need a permit?", they are usually thinking about a general building permit. But there are actually two distinct permit types that can apply to radon mitigation:

1. General Building Permit

Required when the work constitutes a structural alteration or a regulated mechanical system installation under the building code. For a standard sub-slab depressurization (SSD) system in an existing home, most states do not classify this as a regulated building permit trigger. You are adding a fan and running PVC pipe through a slab — not altering the structure.

Exceptions: some states treat the installation differently for new construction, additions, or homes in certain zoning classifications.

2. Electrical Permit

Required when any new electrical circuit, wiring, or outlet is installed — regardless of what it powers. Most radon mitigation fans are either plugged into an existing outlet (no permit in most jurisdictions) or wired to a dedicated new circuit (permit almost always required). This is a local permit, issued by your city, township, or county building department — not the state.

The practical rule: if your contractor needs to run new wire or add a new circuit breaker to power the fan, an electrical permit is almost certainly required. If they are plugging into an existing outlet and no new wiring is needed, most jurisdictions do not require a permit.

State-by-State Permit and Licensing Reference

The table below covers the 25 highest-radon states. "Building permit" refers to a state-level or general building permit specifically for the mitigation installation. "Electrical permit" is local and almost universally required for new circuits. "Contractor license" indicates whether the state requires certification to perform radon mitigation for compensation.

StateBuilding PermitElectrical PermitContractor License RequiredMore Info
PennsylvaniaNot RequiredCheck LocallyYes (PA DEP)PA Guide →
OhioNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseOH Guide →
IowaNot RequiredCheck LocallyYes (Iowa DNR)IA Guide →
IllinoisNot RequiredCheck LocallyYes (IEMA)IL Guide →
MinnesotaNew Const. OnlyCheck LocallyYes (MDH)MN Guide →
ColoradoNot RequiredCheck LocallyYes (CDPHE)CO Guide →
MontanaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseMT Guide →
IndianaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseIN Guide →
MichiganNot RequiredUsually RequiredNo State LicenseMI Guide →
WisconsinNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseWI Guide →
New JerseyNot RequiredUsually RequiredYes (NJDEP)NJ Guide →
VirginiaNot RequiredRequiredYes (NRSB/NRPP)VA Guide →
MarylandNot RequiredCheck LocallyYes (MDE)MD Guide →
New YorkNot RequiredUsually RequiredNo State LicenseNY Guide →
KentuckyNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseKY Guide →
North DakotaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseND Guide →
South DakotaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseSD Guide →
NebraskaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseNE Guide →
KansasNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseKS Guide →
MissouriNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseMO Guide →
WyomingNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseWY Guide →
UtahNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseUT Guide →
ConnecticutNot RequiredUsually RequiredYes (DEEP)CT Guide →
IdahoNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseID Guide →
NevadaNot RequiredCheck LocallyNo State LicenseNV Guide →
This Table Is a Starting Point, Not a Final Answer Permit requirements can change and vary at the city/county level even within the same state. Always confirm with your local building department before work begins. The one question to ask: "Does installing a radon mitigation fan require an electrical permit at my address?"

Why Contractor Licensing Matters for Permits

In states that require licensed contractors (PA, IL, MN, CO, NJ, VA, MD, IA, CT), the permit process and the contractor verification process are intertwined. A licensed contractor in these states:

In states without a licensing requirement (OH, IN, MI, WI, NY, KY, etc.), the absence of a license does not mean "no rules." It means the rules come from NRPP or NRSB national certification standards rather than a state enforcement body. A contractor who holds NRPP or NRSB certification in a non-licensing state is still bound by the same national installation standards.

The Three Questions to Ask Your Local Building Department

  1. "Does installing a radon mitigation system in an existing home require a building permit in your jurisdiction?" Most will say no. If yes, ask what form and fee is required.
  2. "If the installation requires a new electrical circuit for the fan, does that require an electrical permit?" Almost all will say yes to this one. Confirm the fee and whether your contractor must be a licensed electrician to pull it (some jurisdictions allow general contractors to pull electrical permits; others require a licensed electrician).
  3. "If a permit is required, what does the final inspection process look like — what will the inspector check?" This helps you and your contractor prepare for sign-off without surprises.

New Construction vs. Existing Homes: Different Rules

Everything in this guide applies to existing homes. New construction radon requirements are different — and in many states, more prescriptive.

Minnesota was the first state to require radon-resistant new construction (RRNC) techniques in its building code. Illinois, New Jersey, and several other states have followed with their own requirements. RRNC typically requires: a gas-permeable layer beneath the slab, a plastic sheeting vapor barrier, a PVC standpipe rough-in, and an electrical outlet roughed in near the standpipe — so that a fan can be added later without major work if the home tests high after occupancy.

If you are building a new home, ask your builder whether your state requires RRNC and whether the home will include a passive or active radon system rough-in.

FAQ

For the general building permit, they are likely correct — most states don't require one for existing homes. For the electrical permit, verify independently if new wiring is involved. Call your local building department and ask directly. A two-minute phone call prevents the risk of an open permit appearing on your title search at resale.
The contractor should pull any required permits before work begins. This is standard practice and, in many jurisdictions, required — only licensed contractors can pull certain permits. If a contractor asks you to pull your own permit, that is a red flag. Reputable certified contractors handle this as part of the job.
An unpermitted installation can cause problems at home sale — a title search may flag unpermitted work, and buyers or lenders may require it to be permitted retroactively. Retroactive permits typically involve an inspection of the existing work, a permit fee, and sometimes corrective work if the installation doesn't meet code. It's much simpler to permit correctly the first time.
Possibly, yes. Condominiums and townhouses with shared foundations, HOA rules, or common-area walls can have additional approval steps beyond the building permit process. Check with your HOA or condo association before scheduling installation — some require HOA approval for any work that penetrates common elements. The permit requirement from the building department is separate from HOA approval.
Disclaimer: Permit requirements change and vary by locality. This page is for general informational purposes. Always confirm current requirements with your local building department and a certified radon professional.