Where we work

Radon Mitigation Service Area — Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky

We connect homeowners across Southwest Ohio and Northern Kentucky with licensed radon contractors who cover their county.

Southwest Ohio sits in EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest radon-potential category the map has, predicted above the 4.0 pCi/L action level. The Northern Kentucky counties are Zone 2 (predicted 2–4 pCi/L), but Zone 2 does not mean safe: real-world test results across Northern Kentucky frequently exceed 4.0 pCi/L. That isn't a scare line; it comes from soil, bedrock, and years of test data along the Ohio River valley. Whether you're on the Ohio side up in Butler County or across the river in Boone County, elevated radon is common enough that every home should be tested. When yours reads high, we match you with an independently licensed contractor near you for a free quote. Here's how the matching works.

County by county

The counties we cover

Seven counties, both sides of the river. The four Ohio counties are EPA Zone 1 (predicted >4 pCi/L); the three Northern Kentucky counties are Zone 2 (predicted 2–4 pCi/L), where tests still frequently exceed the 4.0 pCi/L action level. Every home should be tested.

County State Radon note
Hamilton Ohio Cincinnati proper — dense pre-1940 housing stock with basements that give radon easy paths in.
Butler Ohio Fast-growing suburbs like West Chester and Fairfield; new and old foundations alike test high.
Warren Ohio Mason and Loveland sit on the glacial till that holds and releases radon into finished basements.
Clermont Ohio Rural and exurban east of the city, where well-served homes on rock still read above the action level.
Boone Kentucky Florence and the fast-building I-71/75 corridor; fractured limestone under much of the county.
Kenton Kentucky Covington, Independence and the river bluffs — hillside foundations and old basements collect the gas.
Campbell Kentucky The eastern river county of Northern Kentucky — EPA Zone 2, but tests here still frequently exceed the action level.

Find your town

Local radon pages by community

Pick your community for detail on radon in your area and to get matched with a contractor who covers it.

Two states, two rulebooks

We cover both sides of the river

Ohio and Kentucky handle radon credentials differently, and it matters for who fixes your home. Ohio requires radon contractors to hold a license through the Ohio Department of Health (ODH). Kentucky doesn't run a state license the same way, but the standard there is NRPP certification — the national credential most reputable Kentucky pros carry.

Plenty of Cincinnati providers quietly ignore the Kentucky side, treating the river like a wall. We don't. If your home is in Boone, Kenton, or Campbell County, we match you with a contractor who works there and holds the right credential for that state. See the Northern Kentucky page for how it works across the river, or read our radon mitigation overview.

Not on the list?

Don't see your town?

The pages above are the communities we get asked about most — they're not the whole map. Our contractor network reaches well beyond them across Greater Cincinnati, the Dayton area, and the tri-state region. If your town isn't listed, we very likely still cover it. Reach out with your zip code and we'll tell you straight whether we can match you, and get a licensed contractor to send a free quote. Start on our contact page or check the FAQ first.

Free, no obligation

Ready to find out your number?

Tell us your zip code and a little about your home. We'll connect you with a licensed radon contractor in your county for a free quote — no cost to you.

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