For Greater Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky agents

A Radon Resource You Can Send Clients To — Greater Cincinnati & Northern Kentucky

Radon comes up on a lot of transactions here. When it does, you need somewhere fast, honest, and easy to hand your buyer or seller — without becoming the radon expert yourself. That's this page.

The plain version

What Ohio Valley Radon Mitigation is

Ohio Valley Radon Mitigation is an independent referral service — not a contractor. We don't test homes and we don't install systems. What we do is match homeowners with radon professionals who hold current Ohio Department of Health (ODH) licenses and cover the client's county, then step out of the way so the licensed contractor can do the work.

For an agent, that means one clean handoff: send your client here, and they get connected with a licensed local contractor for a free quote. You stay out of the middle, and nobody is steered toward work they don't need.

Why agents refer clients here

Built for the way real-estate radon actually moves

Radon on a deal is a timing problem as much as a health one. The referral is set up around that.

Fast matching

Clients get connected with a local licensed contractor quickly, so a radon result doesn't stall the file while everyone hunts for a name.

Closing-deadline aware

Inspection windows and closing dates get prioritized. Tell us the date on the contract and the matched contractor works to it.

ODH-licensed only

Every matched contractor holds a current Ohio Department of Health radon license. No unlicensed work landing on your transaction.

No cost to refer

There's no charge to the agent or the client for the match. The contractor's quote is free and comes with no obligation.

The real-estate radon timeline

Test to clear-to-close, start to finish

Most deals with a radon issue follow the same path. Here's what your client can expect once a test flags an elevated level.

  1. Test

    A radon measurement is placed during the inspection period, usually 48 hours minimum for a short-term test.

  2. Results

    The reading comes back in pCi/L. At or above the EPA action level of 4.0, mitigation is on the table.

  3. Quote if elevated

    If the number is high, we match the client with a licensed contractor who provides a free quote for the fix.

  4. Install

    The licensed contractor installs the mitigation system, typically a 4-to-8-hour job in one visit.

  5. Post-test

    A follow-up test confirms the system pulled the level down, usually well below 2.0 pCi/L.

  6. Clear to close

    Documentation of the system and the passing post-test goes into the file, and the deal moves ahead.

See the fuller real-estate radon guide →

Ohio disclosure, plainly

How radon fits Ohio's disclosure form

In Ohio, a seller who knows their radon test results is expected to share what they know on the Residential Property Disclosure Form, alongside the home's other known conditions. A high reading isn't a deal-killer — it's a known condition that gets disclosed, and a mitigation system with a passing post-test is what turns it back into a non-issue. This is general information for planning your transaction, not legal advice; point clients to their attorney or broker for anything specific to their contract.

For your client

Send them here to get matched

Your buyer or seller can request a free quote in about two minutes. We connect them with an ODH-licensed contractor who covers their county — no cost to them, and their timeline comes first.

For agents

Share this page with your clients

Bookmark it, link it from your site's resources or buyer-guide page, drop it in a follow-up email, or text it when radon shows up on an inspection. The address is short and easy to remember:

ohiovalleyradonmitigation.com/for-realtors

Because we're a referral service and not a contractor, sending a client here doesn't tie you to any one company or put you in the recommendation seat — the match is handled independently, and the licensed contractor owns the work.

Want the deeper version for a client who likes detail? Point them to the real-estate radon guide, the cost guide, or how the matching works.

Why it keeps coming up here

Both sides of the river run high

The Ohio side of the market sits in EPA Radon Zone 1, the highest-potential category. Northern Kentucky falls in Zone 2, and local tests there still cross the 4.0 pCi/L action level often enough that buyers ask about it. In other words, radon isn't a rare surprise on a Greater Cincinnati or Northern Kentucky deal — it's a routine line item worth having a fast answer ready for.

Back to the Ohio Valley Radon home page →

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