Pleasant Ridge, MI Radon Levels
Check local Pleasant Ridge radon levels and find certified testing and mitigation professionals to keep your home safe
Pleasant Ridge, MI Radon Facts
Located in Oakland County within the Detroit Metro area, Pleasant Ridge features predominantly older residential construction with full basements that can trap radon gas from underlying glacial soils. Testing data for this 48069 zip code community is currently limited, making individual home testing essential for residents. Given Michigan's glacial geology and the area's housing characteristics, homeowners should conduct baseline radon measurements to ensure indoor air quality.
Oakland County average: 7.30 pCi/L, based on 50 user-submitted tests across 22 cities in the county. No homeowner readings have been submitted for Pleasant Ridge itself yet, so this county figure is the closest available benchmark. The EPA recommends taking action at or above 4.0 pCi/L.
Pleasant Ridge, MI Radon Mitigation
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Radon Readings Near Pleasant Ridge, MI
No homeowner tests have been submitted for Pleasant Ridge 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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Birmingham | 6.2 mi | 6.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Warren | 6.5 mi | 5.67 pCi/L | 3 |
| Franklin | 6.5 mi | 8.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Troy | 7.6 mi | 3.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Bloomfield Hills | 9.3 mi | 4.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Sterling Heights | 9.8 mi | 7.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Harper Woods | 11.2 mi | 5.00 pCi/L | 1 |
| Farmington | 12.1 mi | 2.00 pCi/L | 1 |
Oakland County Radon Profile
The soils and bedrock of Oakland County place it in EPA Radon Zone 2, a moderate-risk classification with predicted indoor averages of 2 to 4 pCi/L. Homeowner-submitted tests from 22 cities in Oakland County average 7.30 pCi/L across 50 tests — above the EPA's 4 pCi/L action level, reinforcing the need for testing across the county. Since radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer nationally, the EPA urges every household in Oakland County to test, as levels can differ between neighboring homes.