Ohio Statewide Rule: No Building Permit Required
Ohio's building code does not classify a standard sub-slab depressurization radon mitigation system as a project that triggers a statewide building permit in an existing single-family home. This means you will not file paperwork with the Ohio Department of Commerce or any state agency before your contractor installs the system.
This is not unusual — the majority of U.S. states take the same position for existing homes. Radon mitigation in a finished basement or crawl space is treated similarly to other mechanical improvements: the building itself is not being structurally altered, so a full building permit is not triggered at the state level.
What can trigger a permit is the electrical component of the installation — specifically, the dedicated circuit and outlet that powers the radon fan. That falls under electrical code, and electrical permits are issued at the local (city, township, or county) level in Ohio, not the state level.
The Electrical Permit Question
Most radon mitigation systems include a continuously running fan — typically 20 to 90 watts — that must be hardwired or plugged into a dedicated circuit. Whether that fan circuit requires an electrical permit depends entirely on your local jurisdiction.
Ohio's Residential Code (based on the International Residential Code) delegates electrical permit authority to local building departments. The result is that two homes 15 miles apart in different townships can have different requirements.
A reputable, NRPP-certified contractor will know whether a permit is required in your specific municipality and will pull the permit themselves before work begins. If a contractor tells you no permit is ever needed without checking your specific address, that is a red flag.
Columbus, Cleveland, Akron, and Cincinnati: City-Level Details
Columbus / Franklin County
Columbus enforces the Ohio Building Code through the Division of Building and Zoning Services. For a radon mitigation system in an existing home, a general building permit is not required. However, if the installation involves any new electrical work — including adding an outlet or running a new circuit to the fan — an electrical permit is required. The Columbus permit fee for minor electrical work starts at approximately $50–$75 as of 2024, though fees are updated periodically.
To confirm current requirements: call Columbus Building and Zoning Services at (614) 645-7433 or visit the city's permit portal at permits.columbus.gov.
Cleveland / Cuyahoga County
Cleveland and its suburbs (Parma, Lakewood, Strongsville, etc.) each operate their own building departments. In the City of Cleveland itself, radon mitigation does not require a building permit for the structural work, but an electrical permit is required when a new circuit is added for the fan. Suburban Cuyahoga County jurisdictions vary — Strongsville and Parma both require electrical permits for new fan circuits; some smaller townships are more lenient.
Cuyahoga County Building Department (unincorporated areas): (216) 443-7190.
Akron / Summit County
The City of Akron Building Department does not require a radon-specific building permit for existing homes. An electrical permit is required if any new wiring is installed. Summit County (unincorporated) follows the same approach. Contact Akron Building Department at (330) 375-2060 to confirm for your specific address.
Cincinnati / Hamilton County
Cincinnati operates under the Ohio Building Code administered by the city's Department of Buildings and Inspections. No separate radon mitigation permit is required, but electrical permits apply to new circuits. Hamilton County unincorporated areas follow county code — call (513) 946-2400.
Always Call Before Work Starts
Ohio has 88 counties and hundreds of municipalities, each with authority over local permits. This page covers the four major cities. For all other locations, call your local building department and ask specifically: "Does installing a radon mitigation fan require an electrical permit?" It takes two minutes and prevents a failed inspection later.
Contractor Certification in Ohio
Ohio does not operate a statewide radon contractor licensing program. Unlike Illinois or Pennsylvania, there is no Ohio-issued certificate you must verify before hiring a radon mitigator.
This does not mean all contractors are equally qualified. The two nationally recognized voluntary certifications are:
- NRPP (National Radon Proficiency Program) — Administered by the American Association of Radon Scientists and Technologists (AARST). Search the registry at nrpp.info.
- NRSB (National Radon Safety Board) — Search the contractor database at nrsb.org.
EPA and the Ohio Department of Health both recommend using NRPP- or NRSB-certified contractors regardless of the absence of a state licensing requirement. Certified contractors must follow the AARST ANSI/AARST SGM-SF standard for radon mitigation in single-family homes — the national performance standard that defines how systems must be designed, installed, and labeled.
When you hire an Ohio radon contractor, ask for their NRPP or NRSB certificate number and verify it takes less than one minute online.
Step-by-Step: What Ohio Homeowners Should Do
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Confirm your test result. If your short-term test showed elevated radon, conduct a second long-term test (90 days, ideally over heating season) before committing to mitigation — unless results are above 8 pCi/L, in which case act sooner. At or above 4 pCi/L on a confirmed long-term test, proceed with mitigation.
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Find 2–3 NRPP or NRSB certified contractors. Get written quotes from at least two. Quotes should include: system type (SSD is standard for basements and slabs), fan model, warranty, post-mitigation test, and whether they will pull the electrical permit if needed.
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Confirm permit requirements for your address. Ask your chosen contractor which permits they will pull. If a new circuit is needed, they should pull an electrical permit with your local building department before installing.
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Installation day. A standard SSD installation in an Ohio ranch or split-level home takes 3–8 hours. The contractor drills a suction point through the basement slab (or crawl space membrane), installs PVC pipe routing to the exterior, mounts the fan, and vents above the roofline or 12 inches above any window or door.
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Post-mitigation test. Wait at least 24 hours after installation, then run a new short-term or long-term radon test. The system label (required under AARST standards) must include the installation date, contractor name, and NRPP/NRSB number. Results should drop to below 4 pCi/L — many Ohio systems bring levels to 1–2 pCi/L or lower.
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Electrical inspection (if applicable). If an electrical permit was pulled, schedule the inspection with your local building department. Your contractor should coordinate this. Do not skip it — an open permit can create issues when you sell the home.
Ohio Radon Zones by County
The EPA divides the U.S. into three radon potential zones. Ohio has counties in all three zones, which affects how urgently you should test and how likely mitigation will be needed.
| Zone | Average Indoor Radon | Ohio Counties (Examples) |
|---|---|---|
| Zone 1 (Highest) | Above 4 pCi/L predicted avg | Cuyahoga, Summit, Stark, Wayne, Holmes, Tuscarawas, Muskingum, Perry, Hocking, Vinton, Ross, Highland, Clinton, Warren, Butler, Hamilton |
| Zone 2 (Moderate) | 2–4 pCi/L predicted avg | Lucas, Wood, Sandusky, Erie, Lorain, Geauga, Trumbull, Mahoning, Columbiana, Jefferson |
| Zone 3 (Low) | Below 2 pCi/L predicted avg | Relatively few Ohio counties — Ottawa, some Lake County areas |
Zone 1 status means your county is predicted to have average indoor radon above the EPA action level — but individual homes vary. Testing is the only way to know your actual level. Homes in Zone 2 and Zone 3 areas can still test high depending on soil type, foundation type, and home construction.
Free Download: Ohio Radon Homeowner Checklist
Step-by-step checklist covering testing, contractor selection, permit questions, installation, and post-mitigation testing. Formatted to print on one page.
Download PDF (Free)