If a Cincinnati home inspection just came back with high radon and your closing is in two weeks, take a breath — this is a routine, fixable problem. Most of the homes we mitigate in the Cincinnati metro are real-estate-driven, and we work to closing deadlines as a matter of course.
Why radon shows up in almost every Cincinnati home inspection
Roughly 80% of Cincinnati-area home inspection contracts now include a radon test by default. Given that Hamilton, Butler, Warren, Boone, Campbell, and Kenton counties are all in EPA Radon Zone 1 — and that approximately one in three Hamilton County homes tests above the action level — failed radon tests are extremely common in our market.
This isn't a sign of a "bad" house. It's a sign of the geology under Cincinnati. The Ordovician limestone and shale beneath our region is uranium-rich, and radon enters homes through cracks, sump pits, and the porous concrete of older foundations. Even brand-new construction in Mason, West Chester, and Liberty Township routinely tests high.
What a high radon result means in a purchase contract
Standard Ohio purchase agreements include an inspection contingency window — usually 7 to 14 days — during which a buyer can negotiate repairs or back out. When radon comes back above 4.0 pCi/L, buyers typically respond with one of three asks:
- Seller installs mitigation before closing — most common. Seller hires a contractor, the system is installed within a week, post-test confirms levels are below action.
- Seller credits the buyer at closing — a dollar amount, usually $1,200-$2,000, is credited to the buyer who installs mitigation themselves after taking ownership.
- Seller installs and buyer escrows funds — for tight closings, sometimes a portion of the proceeds is held in escrow until the post-mitigation test confirms levels.
For most Cincinnati transactions, option 1 (seller installs before closing) is fastest and cleanest. The system itself adds documented value to the home, the buyer gets confidence the issue is resolved, and the post-test paperwork goes into the closing file.
The right way to request mitigation in a real-estate offer
If you're a buyer responding to a high radon test, work with your agent to draft the inspection response clearly:
What the request should specify
- Seller to install a radon mitigation system by an ODH-licensed Ohio Radon Mitigation Contractor
- System must reduce post-installation levels below 4.0 pCi/L (preferably below 2.0)
- Post-mitigation test results to be provided to the buyer prior to closing
- Written warranty on the installed system to transfer to the buyer
- System documentation (installation date, contractor info, fan specs) to be provided
The closing-deadline timeline
Here's a realistic timeline for a closing-driven mitigation in Cincinnati:
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| Day 1 | High radon result delivered to buyer/agent |
| Day 2-3 | Buyer requests mitigation; seller agrees |
| Day 4 | Seller contacts mitigation contractor; quote provided |
| Day 5-7 | System installed (typically 3-6 hours of work) |
| Day 8-10 | Post-mitigation test runs (48-96 hours) |
| Day 11-12 | Test results delivered; documentation finalized |
| Day 13-14 | Closing proceeds on schedule |
FHA and VA loan radon requirements
FHA and VA-backed loans have specific requirements when radon comes up during an inspection. HUD's mitigation guidance applies when properties test above 4.0 pCi/L, and many VA appraisers now flag radon as a habitability concern. Read more on our FHA and VA loan radon requirements page.
What a documented mitigation system is worth on the resale market
In Cincinnati's housing market, a documented, properly installed radon mitigation system is now considered a value-add — not a "fixed problem" disclosure. Recent buyers expect to see Zone 1 disclosures and prefer homes that have already handled the issue. We've heard from Cincinnati real estate agents that listings with documented mitigation typically:
- Avoid the 2-4 week mid-transaction delays caused by failed buyer inspections
- Reduce buyer escalation requests during negotiation
- Attract more confident offers, especially from out-of-state buyers familiar with radon