Hickory Hills, IL Radon Levels
Check local Hickory Hills radon levels and find certified testing and mitigation professionals to keep your home safe
Hickory Hills, IL Radon Facts
Part of the Chicago Metro in Cook County, Hickory Hills (60457) benefits from the area's predominantly single-family homes built between the 1950s and 1990s with full basements. The community sits on glacial till deposits from Wisconsin glaciation that create soil conditions favorable for radon production. While specific local testing data is limited, residents should test their homes given the geological context and basement-heavy housing stock.
Cook County average: 6.44 pCi/L, based on 82 user-submitted tests across 40 cities in the county. No homeowner readings have been submitted for Hickory Hills itself yet, so this county figure is the closest available benchmark. The EPA recommends taking action at or above 4.0 pCi/L.
Hickory Hills, IL Radon Mitigation
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Radon Readings Near Hickory Hills, IL
No homeowner tests have been submitted for Hickory Hills yet. The closest cities with user-submitted radon data are shown below — explore them to gauge local conditions. Radon varies by home, so testing is the only way to know your level.
| City | Distance | Avg User Level | Readings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Willow Springs | 2.7 mi | 5.50 pCi/L | 2 |
| Burbank | 3.3 mi | 2.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Palos Heights | 4.8 mi | 5.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Willowbrook | 5.5 mi | 6.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Western Springs | 6.5 mi | 7.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Lemont | 7.7 mi | 16.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Riverside | 7.7 mi | 8.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Berwyn | 7.7 mi | 5.00 pCi/L | 1 |
Cook County Radon Profile
Cook County is mapped as EPA Radon Zone 2, where the local geology is predicted to produce moderate indoor screening levels between 2 and 4 pCi/L. Homeowner-submitted tests from 40 cities in Cook County average 6.44 pCi/L across 82 tests — above the EPA's 4 pCi/L action level, reinforcing the need for testing across the county. Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the United States, and a short-term test is the only way to confirm a specific home's level in Cook County.