Radon Mitigation System Inspection: What Inspectors Check and What You Receive

After your mitigation system is installed, what comes next? This guide covers building inspections, post-mitigation testing, documentation, and what "passing" actually means.

Two Different "Inspections" — Know the Difference There are two separate verification steps after radon mitigation: (1) a building/electrical inspection if a permit was pulled, and (2) a post-mitigation radon test that confirms the system is actually reducing radon. They are different processes, done by different people, on different timelines.

The Two Types of Post-Installation Verification

Homeowners are often confused because the word "inspection" is used loosely for two different things. Understanding the difference prevents scheduling mistakes and missed steps.

1. Building or Electrical Permit Inspection

If your contractor pulled an electrical permit for the radon fan circuit (required in many municipalities), you will need a final inspection by your local building department. This inspection is about code compliance — not about whether radon levels dropped. The inspector verifies that the electrical work meets code, the fan is properly mounted, and the installation conforms to what was permitted.

2. Post-Mitigation Radon Test

Regardless of whether a permit was required, every mitigation installation should be followed by a radon test to verify that levels have actually dropped. This is done with a radon test device — either by you (using a mail-in kit) or by a certified radon measurement professional. Some states require a certified tester for the post-mitigation result; others do not. This test is about effectiveness, not code compliance.

Building and Electrical Inspection: What to Expect

If an electrical permit was required in your municipality, your contractor should have scheduled the final inspection as part of the job. You should not need to do anything except be home during the inspection window (usually a 2–4 hour arrival window).

The building inspector arrives, reviews the permit, and examines the installation. The inspection typically takes 15–30 minutes. At the end, the inspector either:

If your contractor did not mention a permit or inspection, ask them directly: "Did you pull any permits for this job, and is there a final inspection required?" A permit that is pulled but never closed (final inspection never scheduled) can create problems when you sell the home — a title search will show an open permit.

What a Building Inspector Checks on a Radon Mitigation System

Building inspectors typically do not have specialized radon training. They are checking code compliance for the electrical work and general installation quality. A typical inspection covers:

Inspection ItemWhat the Inspector Looks For
Electrical circuitProper gauge wiring, correct breaker size, GFCI protection if required, no exposed wires
Fan mountingSecure mounting to exterior wall or attic structure; fan accessible for maintenance
Exhaust discharge locationMinimum height above grade, clearance from windows and doors, not directed into enclosed space or garage
Pipe penetrationsSealed at foundation penetration, caulked and air-sealed where pipe passes through floors or walls
System labelingWarning label present on system (AARST standards require a label with installation date and contractor info)
Visual warning deviceManometer or U-tube indicator present and visible — this is how you know the system is running
What Inspectors Usually Don't Check Standard building inspectors do not measure whether radon levels actually dropped. They don't check sub-slab air pressure, fan suction levels, or whether the system design is adequate for your home's geology. That effectiveness verification is entirely separate — it comes from your post-mitigation radon test.

The Post-Mitigation Radon Test: The Test That Actually Matters

The post-mitigation radon test is the most important verification step. It tells you whether the system is actually working — whether radon levels in your home have dropped to an acceptable level.

Who Conducts the Test

Requirements vary by state:

Even in states that don't require it, having the post-mitigation test conducted by an independent certified professional adds credibility to your documentation — especially useful if you plan to sell the home.

Where to Place the Post-Mitigation Test Device

Place the test device in the same location (or as close as possible) where the original high-reading test was conducted. This allows a direct comparison. The lowest livable level of the home is the standard placement — finished basement if applicable, first floor if there is no finished basement.

Timing: When to Schedule Each Step

  1. Immediately after installation: Ask your contractor whether they pulled a permit and whether a final inspection is required. If so, confirm they are scheduling it — it should not be your responsibility to track this, but verify.
  2. 24–48 hours after installation: You may begin your post-mitigation radon test. AARST and EPA both recommend waiting at least 24 hours to allow the system to stabilize pressure conditions under the slab. In practice, 48 hours is better before deploying a test device.
  3. 2–7 days after deployment: For a short-term charcoal canister test, retrieve the canister and mail it per the kit instructions. Allow 7–14 business days for lab results.
  4. Building inspection window: Usually scheduled within 1–4 weeks of permit application, depending on your local building department's current workload. Your contractor should coordinate this date.
  5. When results arrive: Compare to your pre-mitigation level. Target is below 4 pCi/L, ideally below 2 pCi/L. If results are still above 4 pCi/L, contact your contractor — the system may need adjustment (additional suction point, fan upgrade, or slab penetration sealing).

Documentation You Should Receive and Keep

After a complete mitigation installation and inspection process, you should have the following documentation. Keep these in a home maintenance file — they are valuable at resale and for insurance purposes.

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Selling Your Home? These Documents Are Critical

Real estate transactions in many states require radon disclosure. Buyers and their inspectors will ask to see: your pre-mitigation test, the post-mitigation test, the contractor's certificate, and any permit documentation. Having a complete file reduces negotiation friction and can prevent a deal from falling through due to unresolved radon questions.

What Happens If the Post-Mitigation Test Shows Levels Still Above 4 pCi/L?

Approximately 10–15% of initial radon mitigation installations do not achieve the target level on the first attempt. This is not a disaster — it is a known issue that certified contractors are trained to address.

Common reasons a system underperforms:

A reputable contractor will diagnose and correct system underperformance at no or reduced charge, especially if they offer a post-mitigation guarantee. Ask about this guarantee before signing any contract — many certified contractors guarantee achieving below 4 pCi/L or will return to adjust at no additional cost.

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Download: Post-Mitigation Verification Checklist

Tracks all post-installation steps: permit inspection, test placement, lab results, and documentation. Print and fill in as you go.

Download Free PDF

Frequently Asked Questions

Wait at least 24 hours after installation before deploying a test device. 48 hours is preferred to allow the system to fully stabilize sub-slab pressure. Then run a standard short-term test (2–7 days minimum). The EPA recommends at least a 2-day post-mitigation test. For the most accurate long-term result, run a 90-day alpha track test after the short-term confirms the system is working.
No. Building inspectors check code compliance for the electrical and mechanical installation — not radon concentrations. They verify the fan is properly mounted, the circuit meets code, and the system is labeled. Only a radon test can confirm that levels actually decreased.
This varies by contractor. Some include a post-mitigation test in their installation price — confirm this before signing. Others charge separately ($100–$175 for a certified professional, or $15–$30 for a DIY mail-in kit where allowed). If your state requires a certified tester for post-mitigation testing, budget $100–$175 for this separate service.
It depends on whether a permit was pulled. If your contractor pulled an electrical permit, a final inspection is required to close the permit. If no permit was required or pulled, no building inspection is necessary. Check with your contractor and local building department to confirm permit status.
Contact your contractor immediately and provide the test results. A reputable certified contractor will diagnose why the system underperformed and make corrections. Ask whether they offer a performance guarantee — many NRPP-certified contractors guarantee below 4 pCi/L or will correct at no charge. If the contractor is unresponsive, contact the contractor's certifying body (NRPP or NRSB) to file a complaint.
Disclaimer: This page provides general guidance on radon mitigation inspection and testing processes. Requirements vary by state and municipality. Consult a certified radon professional and your local building department for guidance specific to your situation.
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