Local testing decision
Radon Testing in Lebanon County, PA
Lebanon County should be treated as a high-priority testing market because 13.0 pCi/L primary measured result, and 402.6 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.
Direct answer
Lebanon County crosses the action threshold in the official county data.
Lebanon 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.
Evidence
Basement and first-floor test data
Primary signal
13.0 pCi/L
Reported tests
25,735 reported tests
What this evidence can and cannot tell you
Lebanon County, PA has more than the EPA map: PA DEP Radon Division exposes 25,735 reported tests, 13.0 pCi/L county average, and 402.6 pCi/L high-end signal for 1990-2025.
Lebanon County, PA is measurement-backed for 1990-2025. The measured average is 13.0 pCi/L. The high-end signal reaches 402.6 pCi/L.
Your next test decision
No reading yet: run a short-term test now, then confirm or price mitigation quickly if the result is elevated.
Retest trigger: a 2.0-3.9 pCi/L home result should be confirmed here because 13.0 pCi/L average keeps the county from being a dismiss-it signal.
Move from a test result to a local plan
Use the result band, foundation type, and county cost range together. A county signal is context; the home's own test controls the decision.
Sources