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Radon Testing – Is your home safe?

Oakland County Encourages Home Radon Testing During National Radon Action Month

banner image for Radon Testing Month (January)
You can test your home yourself. Any time of the year!
  • Radon test kits are only $5 (half of the usual $10 price) at Health Division offices during January 2024.
  • Tests are available at other times, but winter is the best time to test when your windows and doors are closed most of the time.
  • Environmental Health Service hours are 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.

Radon testing kits are half-off at Oakland County Health Division offices during the month of January to mark National Radon Action Month. For only $5, residents can test their homes for the colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas which is the second-leading cause of lung cancer in the United States, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Radon in your house
How Radon can enter your home

Testing your home is the only way to know if you and your family are at risk of radon exposure, since you cannot see, smell, or taste radon.

The Health Division recommends testing homes for radon gas during the winter months since windows and doors typically remain closed, allowing radon gas to collect inside and be more easily detected. The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) encourages radon testing every two years as homes settle and new cracks form in the foundation that may cause radon levels to change.

Radon test kits for homes are available for purchase at Health Division offices in Pontiac and Southfield weekdays from 8:30 am to 5 pm:

  • North Oakland Health Center, 1200 Telegraph, Building 34E, Pontiac
  • South Oakland Health Center, 27725 Greenfield Road, Southfield

The cost of a radon test kit is $5 in January and $10 during the rest of the year. You simply hang the test kit in your basement for a few days according to the instructions provided. You then mail in your completed test kit in the envelope that is included – no postage necessary. There is no additional charge for the analysis or the results.

Radon is a naturally occurring, invisible, odorless gas. The gas can sometimes get into homes through cracks in floors or walls and can accumulate, becoming a health hazard. According to EGLE, approximately 30 percent of homes tested in Oakland County have had elevated levels of radon. The only way to know if your home has high radon levels is to test. If high levels of radon are found, contact the Health Division’s Environmental Health Services at 248-858-1312 in Pontiac or 248-424-7191 in Southfield for more information about radon mitigation and service providers.

Visit www.epa.gov/radon or www.oakgov.com/community/health for more information, or contact Nurse on Call, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, at 800-848-5533 or noc@oakgov.com. For up-to-date public health information, follow @publichealthOC on Facebook and Twitter.

Radon Awareness Video:

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