Radon in Pike County, Pennsylvania
Radon levels in Pike County, Pennsylvania are moderate based on EPA Zone 2. 1 city has documented radon testing data through PA Radon Hub. The EPA action level of 4 pCi/L is exceeded in approximately 39.4% of tested homes in this region.
Pike County is classified as Zone 2 on the EPA Map of Radon Zones. This page aggregates radon risk data for every PA Radon Hub city in the county, explains the underlying geology, and connects Pennsylvania property owners with independent, DEP-certified testing and mitigation professionals serving Pike County.
Radon Risk in Pike County
The dominant subsurface formation across PA Radon Hub cities in Pike County is Appalachian Plateau / Devonian Marcellus-Hamilton Shale Sequence. Radon is produced continuously in uranium-bearing bedrock, migrates through soil gas, and enters the built environment through foundation penetrations. Pennsylvania's combination of fractured bedrock, older housing stock, and pronounced stack effect during the heating season drives elevated indoor radon across most of the Commonwealth.
The EPA zone classification divides counties by predicted average indoor radon: Zone 1 predicts average indoor radon above 4.0 pCi/L, Zone 2 predicts 2.0–4.0 pCi/L, and Zone 3 predicts below 2.0 pCi/L. Zone classifications are population averages — individual home results can vary substantially. Pike County's Zone 2 classification means the county has moderate baseline radon potential, but every home should be tested individually.
Cities We Serve in Pike County
Radon and Home Sales in Pike County
Radon disclosure expectations and pre-sale testing practices vary across Pennsylvania, but Pike County buyers and lenders increasingly request results during the inspection contingency period. Sellers often mitigate ahead of listing to avoid renegotiation when post-inspection results return high.
For a county-by-county breakdown of disclosure norms, mortgage requirements, and buyer/seller obligations, see the Radon and Home Sales in Pennsylvania guide.
SB 760 Proposed School Testing Mandate in Pike County
Pennsylvania Senate Bill 760, if enacted as currently drafted, would require radon testing in every public school building constructed before 2014 that sits in an EPA Zone 1 county. Initial testing would be required to occur during the 2026–2027 academic year under ANSI-AARST MA-MFLB protocol, with mitigation required within six months of any confirmed result at or above 4.0 pCi/L. As of 2026 SB 760 remains in committee, so no testing mandate is currently in force. For Pike County school districts, the proposed mandate would apply to the subset of buildings located within Zone 1 boundaries and would raise community awareness of radon across the broader county if enacted. For full compliance details, see the Pennsylvania Radon Compliance 2026 guide.
Request Radon Information for Pike County
Submit your request and we will connect you with a DEP-certified professional serving Pike County. All providers verified against the PA Department of Environmental Protection Bureau of Radiation Protection directory.
For detailed pricing by foundation type across Pennsylvania, see the Pennsylvania Radon Mitigation Cost Guide.
Verify DEP certification status before hiring — search the PA DEP certified contractor directory.
PA Radon Hub is an independent informational resource. We do not perform radon testing or mitigation. We connect Pennsylvania property owners with independent, DEP-certified professionals — verify any contractor's certification at dep.pa.gov/radon before hiring.
Measured Radon Levels in Pike County
- Basement
- 4.99pCi/L
- based on 5,766 tests
- First Floor
- 2.34pCi/L
- based on 1,368 tests
PA DEP RadonZip Tool, January 1990 – December 2025 · Last updated 2026-05-20
Frequently Asked Questions
Pike County is classified as Zone 2 — moderate radon potential — based on EPA radon zone mapping. 39.4% of tested homes across PA Radon Hub cities in this county exceed the 4.0 pCi/L action level.
The dominant subsurface formation referenced across PA Radon Hub cities in Pike County is Appalachian Plateau / Devonian Marcellus-Hamilton Shale Sequence. Radon is produced by the decay of radium-226 in uranium-bearing bedrock and migrates into buildings through soil gas pathways — cracks, utility penetrations, and sump pits in the foundation.
Potentially, if Pike County schools fall in EPA Zone 1 and were built before 2014. Pennsylvania Senate Bill 760, if enacted as currently drafted, would require public school buildings meeting those criteria to complete radon testing during the 2026–2027 academic year, with mitigation required within six months of any confirmed result at or above 4.0 pCi/L. As of 2026 SB 760 remains in committee, so no testing mandate is currently in force.