R
RadonVerdict
EPA Zone 1 - High Risk

Radon Levels & Zone Map in Mifflin County, PA

Direct Answer for basement and lowest-level tests: Mifflin County backs up the EPA high-zone warning. Official county data shows 13.4 pCi/L as the primary measured signal. Do the home test, and treat a confirmed 4.0+ result as mitigation-planning territory.

Quick Read

Treat this as a test-now county

The official source signal is strong enough that a first test is the minimum; a confirmed 4.0+ result should move into cost or credit planning.

County signal

Official measured data puts this county in a high-priority testing lane.

What the number changes

2.0-3.9 pCi/L usually means retest or track. 4.0+ is where EPA action and quote planning start to matter.

Fastest next move

No reading: test now. Reading at 4.0+: move into mitigation planning.

Measured Radon Data

Mifflin County evidence before the next step

Mifflin County, PA has more than the EPA map: PA DEP Radon Division exposes 3,489 reported tests, 13.4 pCi/L county average, and 709.3 pCi/L high-end signal for 1990-2025.

Source window

1990-2025

County evidence type

High measured burden

County context only; your home test controls the decision.

Primary result

13.4 pCi/L

91st percentile in-state

4.0+ signal

Not available

n/a in-state

High-end signal

709.3 pCi/L

72nd percentile in-state

Official evidence dossier

Source record for Mifflin County, PA

Pennsylvania values are RadonVerdict county rollups from PA DEP ZIP reports, with basement readings treated as the primary local signal and first-floor readings preserved as a separate floor context.

Open source dataset

Primary public source

Basement and first-floor test data

Measurement window

1990-2025

Retrieved / checked

2026-05-05

County FIPS

42087

Primary field

13.4 pCi/L

Median field

Not available

4.0+ field

Not available

Sample / volume

3,489 reported tests

Metric shape

PA separates basement and first-floor tests. RadonVerdict treats basement results as the main signal for mitigation planning and keeps first-floor results as context.

Source limitation

PA DEP Radon Division ZIP reports are based on short-term closed-house radon tests submitted by certified radon laboratories and testers from January 1990 through December 2025. PA DEP does not report an average when a ZIP has fewer than 30 tests. RadonVerdict rolls ZIP rows up to primary counties and treats the basement average as the primary local signal while preserving first-floor context.

Property-level limit

Not a property-level diagnosis. The county record explains local evidence; your home's own test result controls the next decision.

County-specific interpretation

Mifflin County crosses the action threshold in the official county data.

Mifflin County is a test-now case because 13.4 pCi/L average. In-state rank: 91st percentile for average. No reading means get the first number; a 4.0+ home result should move straight to mitigation quotes or seller-credit math.

Real-estate use

Buyer or seller use: ask for a fresh lowest-level test before inspection deadlines, tie any 4.0+ result to a contractor quote, and do not negotiate from the county signal alone.

Mifflin County should be treated as a county where a first test is urgent and a 4.0+ result should move directly into mitigation pricing or seller-credit math.

Use This Evidence

High-risk intent answer

Is radon bad in Mifflin County?

Mifflin County should be treated as a high-priority testing market because 13.4 pCi/L primary measured result, and 709.3 pCi/L high-end signal in PA DEP Radon Division data. A missing home reading means test now; a 4.0+ result means mitigation pricing or seller-credit math should start.

Home result translator

Enter the result. Pick the deal side. Get the route.

Official measured data puts this county in a high-priority testing lane.

County signal

13.4 pCi/L

At or above 4.0

Not available

Decision side

Foundation clue

No reading yet? Test first. 2.0-3.9 usually means confirm the result. 4.0+ means budget local mitigation or seller-credit math before the conversation starts.

Fastest Path

Pick the situation that matches you

You should not need to read the whole guide before clicking one of these. Start with the lane that matches your current stage, then come back for the deeper reference only if you still need it.

Jump into a prefilled Mifflin County action plan based on the result you already have, instead of starting from a generic cost page.

Already tested once and need the cleanest follow-up path?

Review retesting steps

County Evidence Snapshot

Mifflin County testing context

Source-backed county page

Mifflin County should be treated as a testing-priority county because the official source signal backs up the EPA high-zone warning. Official county data shows 13.4 pCi/L as the primary measured signal. Use the EPA map as context, but let the home test decide mitigation or credit planning.

EPA map signal

Zone 1

County-level predicted indoor screening range, not a home-level test result.

Housing base

21,391

28th percentile among 67 PA counties with data.

Older housing share

26.1%

27th percentile in-state; older homes often need clearer test placement decisions.

Median home value

$131,300

Used as context for whether mitigation is a small maintenance item or a negotiation issue.

Measured Radon Data

Pennsylvania DEP Radon Test Data by ZIP Code

1990-2025

Basement average

13.4 pCi/L

At or above 4.0

Not available

Maximum reported

709.3 pCi/L

Reported tests

3,489

PA DEP floor rollup: basement average 13.4 pCi/L from 2,865 tests; first-floor average 7.7 pCi/L from 624 tests.

PA DEP Radon Division ZIP reports are based on short-term closed-house radon tests submitted by certified radon laboratories and testers from January 1990 through December 2025. PA DEP does not report an average when a ZIP has fewer than 30 tests. RadonVerdict rolls ZIP rows up to primary counties and treats the basement average as the primary local signal while preserving first-floor context.

County evidence interpretation

High measured burden

Source-backed context Not a home-specific result

Primary result rank

91st percentile

13.4 pCi/L

4.0+ rank

n/a

Not available at or above 4.0

High-end rank

72nd percentile

709.3 pCi/L

Test volume rank

34th percentile

3,489 reported tests

How to use this county data

Data source

Basement and first-floor test data

Pennsylvania values are RadonVerdict county rollups from PA DEP ZIP reports, with basement readings treated as the primary local signal and first-floor readings preserved as a separate floor context.

What the numbers show

Basement-focused results

PA separates basement and first-floor tests. RadonVerdict treats basement results as the main signal for mitigation planning and keeps first-floor results as context.

Nearby comparison

Nearby comparison: Closest counties by county average: Lebanon County (13.0 pCi/L) is just lower, and Schuylkill County (13.9 pCi/L) is just higher.

How this helps

Use this for basement-level test planning and 4.0+ mitigation or seller-credit decisions in Mifflin County.

What the data says

Mifflin County, PA is measurement-backed for 1990-2025. The measured average is 13.4 pCi/L. The high-end signal reaches 709.3 pCi/L.

Mifflin County, PA sits at the 91st percentile for measured average, n/a for 4.0+ share, 72nd percentile for high-end readings, and 34th percentile for test volume among 67 measured counties in the state. Closest counties by county average: Lebanon County (13.0 pCi/L) is just lower, and Schuylkill County (13.9 pCi/L) is just higher.

What to do with it

Mifflin County should be treated as a county where a first test is urgent and a 4.0+ result should move directly into mitigation pricing or seller-credit math.

Retest trigger: a 2.0-3.9 pCi/L home result should be confirmed here because 13.4 pCi/L average keeps the county from being a dismiss-it signal.

Source-backed context from PA DEP Radon Division based on about 3,489 reported tests/properties plus comparable county-level measurement fields.

No reading yet

No reading yet: run a short-term test now, then confirm or price mitigation quickly if the result is elevated.

2.0-3.9 result

2.0-3.9 pCi/L: retest or track longer-term rather than dismissing the result, because the county distribution has meaningful elevated readings.

4.0+ result

4.0+ pCi/L: use the result for mitigation quotes, repair scope, or seller-credit negotiation; the county signal is no longer the deciding input.

Source hierarchy: PA DEP Radon Division is used for this county, with EPA zone and Census housing data kept as supporting context. Pennsylvania values are RadonVerdict county rollups from PA DEP ZIP reports, with basement readings treated as the primary local signal and first-floor readings preserved as a separate floor context.

Direct Answer

Is radon bad in Mifflin County?

Mifflin County should be treated as a high-priority testing market because 13.4 pCi/L primary measured result, and 709.3 pCi/L high-end signal in PA DEP Radon Division data. A missing home reading means test now; a 4.0+ result means mitigation pricing or seller-credit math should start.

Evidence Value
Area Mifflin County, PA
EPA Zone Zone 1
Primary Recommendation Perform direct radon testing in the lowest livable level

Your Radon Reading

Enter your home's measured level; the starting value is only a planning example until you have your own result.

5.5 pCi/L
0 2.7 WHO 4.0 EPA 10 20+

Warning: Action Required - EPA Threshold Exceeded

At 5.5 pCi/L, this reading is above the EPA action level. Prompt mitigation planning is recommended after confirmatory testing.

Now
5.5
After
0.3-0.8

Typical mitigation systems reduce radon by 80-99%. See your itemized cost estimate below.

pCi/L

Understanding Radon Levels: Complete Reference

<2.0

Below 2.0 pCi/L - Lower Concern, Keep Testing

Below both the EPA (4.0) and WHO (2.7) action reference levels. This usually means mitigation is not the next immediate step after a confirmed result. The average outdoor radon level is approximately 0.4 pCi/L, and there is no known risk-free indoor level. Periodic testing is still recommended because levels can change over time due to seasonal variations, changes in home ventilation, or foundation settling.

2.0
-4.0

2.0 - 4.0 pCi/L - Elevated, Consider Action

Exceeds the World Health Organization's reference level of 2.7 pCi/L but falls below the US EPA action threshold. The EPA states that homeowners should "consider fixing" homes in this range, especially if the home has a basement used as living space, if children are present, or in connection with a real estate transaction. Practical next step: run a confirmatory long-term test, then compare mitigation quotes if levels remain elevated.

4.0
-8.0

4.0 - 8.0 pCi/L - Action Recommended

Exceeds the EPA action level of 4.0 pCi/L. The EPA and Surgeon General strongly recommend mitigation within a few months. At this level, prioritize confirmatory testing and contractor planning. Standard sub-slab depressurization systems typically reduce indoor levels by 80-99%.

8.0+

Above 8.0 pCi/L - Urgent Action Required

At these levels, the EPA recommends expedited mitigation - ideally within weeks, not months. Occupants should minimize time in lower-level rooms until the system is installed. Use a certified mitigator and request priority scheduling to shorten high-exposure time. Many mitigators offer priority scheduling for homes above 8.0 pCi/L.

Why Radon is a Testing Priority in Mifflin County

The EPA map is only the starting layer for Mifflin County. Official county data shows 13.4 pCi/L as the primary measured signal. That source-backed signal is why the practical move is testing or retesting before treating the county as low urgency.

This still is not a diagnosis for any single home. Foundation type, lowest-level use, pressure differences, and small geological changes can move one house above or below the county pattern.

If you do not have a reading yet, start with a short-term test in the lowest lived-in level. If the result is 2.0-3.9 pCi/L, confirm it; if it is 4.0+ pCi/L, move into mitigation pricing or seller-credit planning.

Radon & Health: What the Science Says

#2
Leading cause of
lung cancer
21K
US deaths per year
from radon
1 in 15
US homes above
4.0 pCi/L

Radon is a Class A carcinogen - the same classification as asbestos and tobacco smoke. The National Academy of Sciences estimates that radon causes approximately 21,000 lung cancer deaths annually in the United States, making it the leading environmental cause of cancer death.

Unlike smoking, radon exposure is involuntary and often invisible. There is no safe level of radon - risk increases linearly with exposure. The good news: radon mitigation systems are highly effective, typically reducing indoor levels by 80-99% within hours of activation.

Source: US Environmental Protection Agency, "A Citizen's Guide to Radon" (EPA 402/K-12/002). National Academy of Sciences, Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR VI) Report, 1999.

Step 1: Test Your Home

Testing is the only way to know your home's radon level. Zone and county data tell you the regional signal, but your home could be significantly higher or lower than the countywide pattern. Start with a valid test setup before using any cost path.

Testing first
Open the home testing guide
Short-term, long-term, retest, and real-estate setup
Need the official path?

State radon programs and EPA provider guidance are the right reference before hiring or confirming local requirements.

Open the state radon program

Already Know Your Level?

If your test shows 4.0 pCi/L or higher, get an itemized cost estimate specific to Mifflin County - including regional labor rates and permit requirements.

Get Mitigation Cost Estimate ->

PA Radon Regulations

!
Seller Disclosure

Pennsylvania requires radon disclosure through the Seller's Property Disclosure Statement. The PA DEP also provides radon-specific guidance for real estate transactions.

yes
Professional Licensing

Pennsylvania requires certification for radon testing and mitigation professionals through the PA DEP.

Official state radon program

How to Test for Radon in Mifflin County

1

Buy a Test Kit

Purchase a short-term charcoal test kit online or from a local hardware store. Cost: $15-$30. Place it in the lowest livable level of your home.

2

Wait 2-7 Days

Keep doors and windows closed (except normal entry/exit) during the test period. Avoid running whole-house fans. Mail the kit to the lab provided.

3

Read Your Results

If results are below 4.0 pCi/L, re-test every 2 years or use a monitor for ongoing tracking. If above 4.0, use our cost calculator to see mitigation options.

Related Radon Resources for Mifflin County

Official State Resource

Pennsylvania radon program and rules

Use the state program link to verify local radon guidance, disclosure language, and contractor credential expectations before you act on an estimate.

Open official PA resource

Disclosure rule tracked

Pennsylvania requires radon disclosure through the Seller's Property Disclosure Statement. The PA DEP also provides radon-specific guidance for real estate transactions.

State licensing required

Pennsylvania requires certification for radon testing and mitigation professionals through the PA DEP.

Sources & Methodology

Radon zone classifications for Mifflin County are sourced from the EPA's Map of Radon Zones, which uses geological surveys, indoor radon measurements, and soil permeability data to assign each county a risk tier.

Disclaimer: Zone data represents county-level screening ranges and cannot predict the radon level in any specific home. Testing is the only reliable method to determine your home's radon concentration. This content is for informational purposes and is not medical advice.

Content review: Source-level retrieval dates

Editorial and Data Transparency

Author
RadonVerdict Data Team (Public Data and Cost Modeling)
Content Review
Source-level dates shown below
Data Retrieved At
2026-02-24