Butler County, Ohio · EPA Radon Zone 1

Radon Mitigation in Liberty Township, Ohio

If a test came back high in your Liberty Township home, we'll connect you with an Ohio ODH-licensed radon mitigation contractor who works Butler County. We're the referral step — the licensed contractor does the testing and the install.

The Butler County picture

Zone 1 doesn't skip the new subdivisions

Butler County sits in EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest-potential category, where indoor levels are predicted to average above the 4.0 pCi/L action line. Liberty Township is right in it.

A lot of homeowners assume radon is an old-house problem. It isn't. The gas comes from the soil under your foundation, so a subdivision built in 2012 sits on the same uranium-bearing ground as a farmhouse next door.

Newer homes are often tighter, too. Better sealing keeps conditioned air in, but it can also hold radon that has already worked its way up through the slab. The only way to know your number is a test.

4.0 pCi/L — EPA Action Level
<2.0 pCi/L — Typical After Mitigation

Zone 1 is a prediction for the area, not a reading for your home. Your basement number could land anywhere — high or low — which is why every address gets its own test.

Local housing & growth

One of Ohio's fastest-growing townships

Liberty Township is an unincorporated township in Butler County, anchored near the Liberty Center area off I-75. It has been one of the fastest-growing townships in the state, and it shows in the housing stock.

Much of your neighborhood is large newer subdivisions put up through the 2000s, 2010s, and beyond — most of them on full basements. A basement is the lowest lived-in level, and it's exactly where radon collects before it spreads to the rest of your home.

That mix of heavy family real-estate turnover and finished-basement living is why radon testing is so common here. Buyers test during the deal, and plenty of owners test again once a lower level becomes a playroom or home office. See the county-by-county radon data →

A Liberty Township advantage

Many newer homes already have a rough-in to activate

Here's the part a lot of Liberty Township owners don't realize they have. Many homes built in the newer subdivisions include a passive radon-resistant rough-in — a vent pipe run from under the slab up through the roof when the house was framed.

Passive means it relies on natural airflow, and on its own it often isn't enough to pull a high reading down. But that stub is a head start.

A licensed contractor can activate a passive rough-in into an active system by adding an inline fan and a manometer, turning the existing pipe into working sub-slab depressurization. When the pipe is already there, the activation is usually simpler and cheaper than starting from a bare slab.

Passive → Active Add a fan to an existing rough-in

Check your basement or garage for a capped white PVC pipe labeled as a radon vent, or a run of pipe headed up into the attic. If it's there, mention it when you reach out — it changes the quote.

What activation and new systems cost →

Buying or selling

Radon and the Liberty Township real-estate deal

With this much family turnover, radon shows up on a lot of Liberty Township contracts. Ohio's residential disclosure form asks sellers about known radon, and most buyers order a test during the inspection period.

When a reading comes back at or above 4.0 pCi/L, mitigation often becomes a negotiation point with a short clock. A rough-in already in the house can make the fix quick — sometimes just an activation before closing.

Tell us your inspection deadline when you reach out and we'll prioritize the match. More on real-estate radon →

How the referral works

Three steps to a licensed Butler County contractor

We're a referral service, not a contractor. We connect you with a vetted, Ohio ODH-licensed radon professional who covers Liberty Township, then step out of the way.

  1. Tell us about your home

    Your zip, your foundation, your latest test number, and whether you have a radon rough-in. A form or a quick call.

  2. We match you locally

    We connect you with an independently licensed contractor who works Butler County and holds current ODH credentials.

  3. The contractor handles it

    You get a free quote straight from that licensed contractor. All testing and mitigation is performed by them — never by us.

Liberty Township questions

Radon questions from Butler County homeowners

Yes. Radon rises from the soil, and a newer Liberty Township home sits on the same Zone 1 ground as everything around it. New construction can read high — testing is the only way to know your home's number.

Look for a capped PVC pipe rising from the slab in your basement or garage, often labeled as a radon vent, with a run headed up toward the roof. If it's there, a licensed contractor can activate it with a fan instead of building a system from scratch.

Usually. When the vent pipe is already run through the house, the contractor mainly adds an inline fan, a monitor, and the wiring, which is less work than coring a slab and routing new pipe. The cost guide covers both.

Same-week service is common across the network, and inspection-period deadlines get prioritized. If your home has a rough-in to activate, the fix can move even faster. Share your timeline when you contact us.

Read the full FAQ

Nearby communities

Radon mitigation elsewhere in the area

See the full service area

Free, no obligation

Get matched with a licensed Liberty Township radon contractor

Tell us about your home — including whether you have a radon rough-in — and we'll connect you with an ODH-licensed contractor in Butler County for a free quote. No cost to you; we're paid by the contractor network, not by homeowners.

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