Radon Mitigation Pros in Albuquerque, NM
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Finding a qualified radon mitigation contractor in Albuquerque shouldn’t be as murky as it is — but between unlicensed handymen advertising on Facebook Marketplace and home inspectors who’ll “throw in a radon test” like it’s a freebie car wash, the market is full of people who’ll happily take your $1,200 without actually solving your problem. Albuquerque sits squarely in EPA Radon Zone 1 across much of Bernalillo County, meaning average indoor radon levels are expected to exceed 4 pCi/L — the federal action level. This directory exists to cut through the noise and put vetted, certified professionals in front of you.
How to Choose a Radon Mitigation Contractor in Albuquerque
- Verify NRPP or NRSB certification — and check which kind. There are separate credentials for measurement and mitigation. An NRPP Certified Radon Mitigation Specialist can install a system; an NRPP Certified Radon Measurement Professional can test. Make sure the person doing your work holds the right card for the right job. Look them up at nrpp.info before signing anything.
- Demand pre- and post-mitigation testing documentation. Any contractor who installs a system should provide follow-up testing showing your levels dropped below 4 pCi/L — ideally below 2. If they quote post-mitigation testing as an add-on, that’s a red flag.
- Understand your foundation type before you get a quote. Albuquerque homes range from mid-century slab-on-grade construction to older adobe builds with crawl spaces and uneven sub-floor barriers. Active soil depressurization — the industry-standard fix — works differently depending on your foundation, and a competent contractor will assess this before giving you a number.
- Get at least two quotes. The installation range in Albuquerque is real and justified. A single-suction-point job in a straightforward slab home is not the same scope as a multi-point system in a home with a partial basement and a post-tension slab. Prices should reflect actual complexity.
- Ask specifically about the warranty. Legitimate contractors typically offer a system performance warranty of one to five years. The right answer to “what if my post-mitigation test still reads above 4 pCi/L?” is “we come back and fix it at no charge.” Anything else, and you’re taking on the risk.
Pro Tip: New Mexico has no state radon contractor licensing law, which means anyone can legally call themselves a radon contractor. NRPP or NRSB certification is the only credential that matters here — it’s the difference between a trained specialist and someone who watched a YouTube tutorial and bought a fan.
What to Expect
A radon test runs $150–$400 depending on whether it’s a short-term 48-hour charcoal canister or a long-term 90-day alpha track measurement. If results come back above 4 pCi/L, a mitigation installation typically costs $800–$1,500 in the Albuquerque market — most straightforward jobs land in the $1,000–$1,200 range. Installation takes 3–6 hours, and you’ll want a follow-up test run 24–48 hours after the system is running to confirm the numbers dropped.
Reality Check: A quote of $500 for a full mitigation install means something got cut — no follow-up test, no warranty, no permit pull, or no-name fan hardware. Conversely, quotes above $2,000 for a standard single-family home deserve a line-item explanation. Get the scope of work in writing either way.
Local Market Overview
Bernalillo County is EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest-priority designation — and Albuquerque’s high-desert geology, volcanic basalt substrate, and uranium-bearing sedimentary formations make elevated readings genuinely common here, not a scare tactic. New Mexico’s real estate disclosure requirements create a predictable demand spike during home sales season, so if you’re buying or selling anywhere in the metro, booking a certified contractor before the inspection period rather than during it will save you from a last-minute scramble and negotiating from a weak position.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a radon mitigation contractor cost in Albuquerque?
Radon Mitigation Contractor services in Albuquerque typically run $800-$1,500 per mitigation install ($150-400 for testing only), depending on scope, complexity, and turnaround requirements. Expedited work and specialized equipment add cost.
What should I look for in a radon mitigation contractor?
Look for NRPP — it's the credential that separates qualified radon mitigation pros from the rest. Also verify insurance, check reviews, and confirm they can handle your project's specific requirements.
How many radon mitigation pros are in Albuquerque?
There are currently 8 radon mitigation pros listed in Albuquerque, NM on RadonTrust.
What does "Sponsored" mean on a listing?
Sponsored providers pay for premium placement and appear at the top of search results. They have claimed profiles and typically respond faster to quote requests. All providers on RadonTrust — sponsored or not — are real businesses.
Radon mitigation contractor Resources
Are Cheap Radon Mitigation Contractors Worth It? The Real Cost of Cutting Corners
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The Complete Guide to Radon Mitigation Contractors
Hire a radon mitigation contractor who actually fixes the problem: look for NRPP or NRSB…
What to Expect When You Hire a Radon Mitigation Contractor (Step by Step)
Radon at 6.8 pCi/L? A radon mitigation contractor can fix it in one day — but check for NRPP certification and a written guarantee below 4 pCi/L first.
Looking for more? Browse our full resource library or find radon mitigation contractors in other cities.