Seller Radon Credit Calculator for Arlington County, VA
If you want a cleaner close in Arlington County, budget around $2821 first and keep $3640 in reserve before the buyer starts naming numbers.
Use this page when a radon inspection, buyer test, or disclosure result has already created a credit, repair, or closing concession conversation.
Property assumptions not confirmed
Confirm two details before you use these credit numbers.
The numbers below are a local planning scenario until the foundation and home size are confirmed. This takes about 20 seconds and updates the range without losing the radon result or deal side.
Reserve target
$2821
The number to budget before you agree to a credit or repair concession.
No-surprise ceiling
$3640
Use this when the route looks harder, the reading is clearly elevated, or timing risk is real.
Fast-close credit
$2400
A lower-friction number when both sides care more about speed than squeezing the last dollar.
Compromise floor
$1400
Keep this in reserve if the conversation moves toward sharing cost instead of full seller coverage.
How to use the local number
Seller repairs before closing
$2821 to $3640
Use this range when the deal depends on the issue being fixed before move-in. The average keeps the ask grounded, while the high end protects you if the contractor flags harder routing.
Closing credit
$2400 to $2821
Best when both sides want a faster close. Start near the quick-close target if speed matters; use the average when you want a stronger but still defensible local number.
Fallback if the seller pushes back
$1400
This is not the first number. It is the compromise line to keep the deal moving if the seller refuses full coverage but both sides still want to close.
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Sample request
Based on local mitigation pricing in Arlington County, we are requesting a radon repair or closing credit sized to cover a typical installation. Our working local range is $2400 to $2821, with a ceiling of $3640 if the final scope is more complex.
Why this is stronger than a national average
Your county action plan already reflects local pricing, foundation type, and home-size context. That keeps the conversation anchored to a real local range instead of a generic nationwide number.