Montgomery, Ohio is part of Hamilton County and classified as EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest-risk classification, where the predicted average indoor radon screening level exceeds the action level of 4.0 pCi/L. If you've just received a high radon test result, are buying or selling a home in Montgomery, or simply want to make sure your home is safe, we connect you with vetted ODH-certified radon mitigation contractors serving the Montgomery area.
Radon in Montgomery, OH
Montgomery is characterized by 1960s-1990s mix; affluent buyers with high mitigation willingness. Median home value here is around $905,000 — homes in this range are typically owned by long-term residents who care about their home's resale value and habitability. Many homes in Montgomery have been in the same family for decades, with original foundation construction that predates modern radon-resistant building practices.
Local landmarks include Old Montgomery, Montgomery Road, Pioneer Park, the Universe Park. Whether you're testing before a sale, addressing a high inspection reading, or just being a careful homeowner, the geology under Montgomery is no different from the rest of Hamilton County — Zone 1 means Zone 1, regardless of street address.
Three reasons radon matters in Montgomery
1. The geology is hostile
Montgomery sits on the same Ordovician limestone and shale that produces high radon across all of Greater Cincinnati. There's no "low-radon corner" of the Cincinnati metro — the uranium-bearing bedrock is regional, not neighborhood-specific.
2. The housing stock works against you
1960s-1990s mix; affluent buyers with high mitigation willingness. Older foundations, porous block walls, and direct soil contact through dirt-floor crawl spaces all create entry routes for radon gas. Even where the floor is sealed, cove joints and plumbing penetrations remain.
3. The winter stack effect
Cincinnati winters create a strong "stack effect" — warm indoor air rising creates negative pressure that pulls more radon out of the soil and into living spaces. Most Montgomery homes test 2 to 7 times higher in winter than summer.
Quick reference: Montgomery radon facts
- County: Hamilton County
- EPA Zone: 1 (EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest-risk classification)
- Population: 10,816
- Median home value: $905,000
- Typical housing: 1960s-1990s mix; affluent buyers with high mitigation willingness
Radon mitigation for Montgomery homes
We work with ODH-certified mitigators who serve Montgomery and the surrounding Hamilton County area. Most Montgomery homes can be mitigated for $900 to $1,600 using sub-slab depressurization — the EPA's gold-standard technique that reduces radon by up to 99%. Crawl space homes, common in older Montgomery construction, are mitigated using sub-membrane depressurization for $1,200 to $1,800.
A typical Montgomery installation takes 3 to 6 hours, includes the post-mitigation test, and comes with a written warranty. You can stay in your home during the work — no need to vacate or board pets.
When to test for radon in Montgomery
- Before listing your home — to avoid mid-transaction surprises
- During home purchase inspection — typical for any Montgomery real estate transaction
- Every two years — for general homeowner peace of mind
- After foundation work — basement waterproofing, crack repair, encapsulation
- After significant landscaping changes — anything that affects soil drainage near the foundation
- If you've never tested — regardless of how long you've owned the home
Why work with us
Queen City Radon Pros is a Cincinnati-based service connecting homeowners with vetted mitigators across the Greater Cincinnati metro — including all of Montgomery. Every contractor we route leads to maintains a current Ohio Department of Health Radon Mitigation Contractor license, NRPP or NRSB certification, general liability insurance, and a written warranty.
We're not a national franchise. We don't have a high-pressure sales team. We don't upsell unrelated services. What we do is connect Montgomery homeowners with the small group of contractors in our region who can actually do the work — quickly, properly, and on real-estate timelines.