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Radon Mitigation Pros in Burlington, VT

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Updated April 2026
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---Finding a qualified radon mitigation contractor in Burlington shouldn’t require a geology degree — but the moment you get a test result back showing 5, 8, or 12 pCi/L, the learning curve gets steep fast. Vermont’s housing stock skews old, its granite-heavy soils push radon levels well above the national average, and Chittenden County contractors range from certified specialists to general handymen with a PVC pipe and a YouTube education. This directory cuts through the noise.

How to Choose a Radon Mitigation Contractor in Burlington

  • Verify NRPP or NRSB credentials — separately for testing and mitigation. These are distinct licenses. A contractor certified for measurement isn’t automatically certified to install a system. Check the NRPP public lookup at nrpp.info before you call.
  • Ask for a pre-mitigation diagnostic, not just a quote. Legitimate contractors will do a pressure field extension test (poke a small hole in your slab, attach a manometer) to confirm your sub-slab conditions before sizing your fan. If someone quotes you a flat price sight-unseen, that’s a flag.
  • Burlington’s housing stock matters — be specific about your foundation. Older homes in the Hill Section and Old North End often have rubble-stone foundations, partial slabs, or dirt crawlspaces that require different mitigation strategies than a poured slab in South Burlington. A contractor who doesn’t ask about your foundation type before quoting hasn’t done this enough.
  • Get the post-mitigation test in writing. Vermont doesn’t currently mandate post-mitigation testing, which means some contractors will skip it unless you ask. Insist on a third-party or charcoal canister retest 24–48 hours after installation — your contract should name the target level (below 2 pCi/L is achievable in most cases with proper installation).
  • Real-estate timeline? Book two weeks out minimum. Chittenden County’s housing market moves fast, and radon contractors get slammed during spring transaction season. If you’re under contract on a home and the inspection flagged elevated radon, don’t wait.

Pro Tip: Vermont’s Agency of Natural Resources maintains a list of certified radon professionals at anr.vermont.gov. Cross-reference it against the contractor’s NRPP or NRSB cert number — both should match.

What to Expect

A standard active soil depressurization (ASD) system in Burlington runs $800–$1,500 installed, with testing-only services (short-term charcoal canisters or continuous monitors) running $150–$400 depending on whether the contractor places the device or mails you a kit. Most installs take four to six hours and include routing PVC from below your slab, through an interior or exterior chase, and exhausting above the roofline with a dedicated fan.

Reality Check: The cheapest quote almost always means a single suction point, a builder-grade fan, and no diagnostic. Sub-slab conditions in Vermont’s rocky glacial soils are uneven — underbidding a job here means a system that moves air but doesn’t actually depressurize the problem zones. A $200 savings upfront can mean a second mobilization at full price when your post-test comes back unchanged.

Local Market Overview

Burlington sits squarely in EPA Radon Zone 1 — the highest-risk designation — driven by the region’s uranium-rich Champlain thrust fault geology and the Lake Champlain basin’s glacial till. Vermont’s relatively active real estate market and a strong culture of home inspections mean radon testing rates here are higher than most of New England, which also means local contractors carry real volume and tend to be meaningfully more experienced than in lower-demand markets.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a radon mitigation contractor cost in Burlington?

Radon Mitigation Contractor services in Burlington 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 Burlington?

There are currently 0 radon mitigation pros listed in Burlington, VT on RadonTrust.

What does "Sponsored" mean on a listing?

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