Latest posts
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How Often Should You Test Your Home for Radon?

Here’s what most homeowners get wrong: they test once, get a passing result, and consider the job done — permanently. That’s a reasonable assumption, but it’s also how…
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First Alert Radon Test Kit Review: Is It Worth It?

Here’s what most people get wrong about the First Alert radon test kit: they judge it by the wrong standard. Homeowners either dismiss it as “just a cheap…
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Pro-Lab Radon Test Kit Review: Is It Worth $15?

Here’s what most people get wrong about the Pro-Lab radon test kit: they judge it by its $15 price tag instead of by its job. They assume cheap…
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How to Read Radon Test Results: A Plain-English Breakdown

Here’s the thing most homeowners get wrong: they look at their radon test result, compare it to 4 pCi/L, and think they’re done. Either they’re “safe” or they’re…
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How Accurate Are Home Radon Test Kits? What Studies Say

Here’s the thing most homeowners get completely wrong about home radon test kits: they assume accuracy is a fixed, built-in property of the kit itself — like a…
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Radon FAQs: 25 Most Common Questions Answered

Here’s what most homeowners get wrong about radon: they treat it like a yes-or-no problem. Either your house has radon or it doesn’t. Either you test once and…
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National Radon Action Month: Why January Matters for Your Home

Here’s what most people get wrong about National Radon Action Month: they think it’s just a public awareness campaign — a reminder to test your home, maybe pick…
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Radon in Basement vs First Floor: Where Is It Most Dangerous?

Here’s what most homeowners get wrong: they treat the basement radon problem as separate from the first floor. They test the basement, see a scary number, and assume…
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What Causes High Radon Levels in a Home?

Here’s what most radon articles get completely wrong: they treat high radon levels as a geology problem. The story they tell is simple — uranium in the soil…
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Radon vs Carbon Monoxide: Key Differences and Which Is More Dangerous

Here’s what most homeowners get completely wrong: they treat radon and carbon monoxide as roughly equivalent household hazards — two invisible gases, two detectors, same level of concern.…
