Protecting Yourself and Your Family From Radon
Data Source provided the the Georgia Department of Community Affairs.
Reports by zip code by homeowners between January 2006 and September 2015.
EPA Recommends
- Test your home for radon — it's easy and inexpensive.
- Fix your home if your radon level is 4 picocuries per liter, or pCi/L, or higher.
- Radon levels less than 4 pCi/L still pose a risk, and in many cases may be reduced.
For answers to the following questions, CLICK HERE
- How Does Radon Get Into Your Home?
- How to Test Your Home
- Short-term Testing
- How to use a test kit
- Long-term Testing
- Short-term Testing
- What Your Test Results Mean
How to Lower the Radon Levels in Your Home- Radon and Home Sales
- Radon in Water
- The Risk of Living With Radon
- Radon Risk Charts
- Radon Myths