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You can't see, smell, or taste radon — a test is the only way to know what's in your home's air. Here's which test fits your situation, how the real-estate protocol works, and what your number actually means in Woodbury County.
Every county in Iowa is EPA Zone 1 — the highest radon-potential rating the agency gives — and Iowa's average indoor radon level is the highest in the United States, several times the national average. The state health department estimates as many as seven in ten Iowa homes exceed the 4.0 pCi/L action level. In practical terms: in Sioux City, an untested home is more likely than not sitting above the level at which the EPA says you should act.
And you genuinely cannot guess. Radon levels swing house to house on the same street, because they depend on the soil directly under each foundation, the cracks and openings in that specific slab, and how each house breathes. New houses test high, old houses test high, houses without basements test high. The only meaningful data point is a test of your house.
A short-term test runs 2–7 days and answers the first question — "do I have a problem worth looking at?" — quickly and cheaply.
Radon fluctuates daily and seasonally — rain, wind, snow cover, and furnace season all move it. A long-term test (91 days to a year, usually an alpha-track detector) averages through all of that and gives the most accurate picture of what your family actually breathes across the year. It's the right tool when a short-term result lands in the 2–6 pCi/L gray zone, or when you want a definitive number before spending on mitigation.
Radon is one of the most common deal-complicating findings in Siouxland home inspections, and transaction testing runs on stricter rules precisely because both sides need a number nobody can argue with:
Two testing habits keep a Zone 1 home honest. First, every mitigation install should be verified with a test after the system has run at least 24 hours — we build this into every job so you get before-and-after numbers in writing. Second, the EPA recommends every home retest every two years or so, and after any major change: finishing a basement, replacing a furnace or water heater, adding an addition, or new sump work. Systems keep working for years, but a $0 glance at the manometer plus an occasional retest is what proves it.
Want a test on the calendar this week? Request a time or call (712) 526-4497 — and if you're mid-transaction, lead with your closing date so we can work backwards from it.
Tell us about your home and we'll get back to you fast — or skip the form and call (712) 526-4497.