Colorado · Boulder County

Radon Levels in Boulder County, Colorado

In Boulder County, Colorado, 43.8% of pre-mitigation home radon tests came back at or above the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L — based on 17,992 tests collected by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment between 2005 and 2024. The county’s median pre-mitigation reading was 3.3 pCi/L, with a maximum recorded result of 384.6 pCi/L.

EPA recommends mitigation when long-term indoor radon measures at or above 4 pCi/L. Counties with elevated medians and large test counts — like Boulder — typically warrant testing during real-estate transactions and seasonal retesting in occupied homes.

Colorado Radon Check services Boulder County

Boulder County by the numbers

Source: Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment. Pre-mitigation indoor radon tests, 2005–2024.

Tests above 4 pCi/L
43.8%

EPA action level

Total tests recorded
17,992

CDPHE 2005–2024

Median result
3.3 pCi/L

pre-mitigation

Maximum recorded
384.6 pCi/L

outlier high

How Boulder compares to Colorado as a whole

Both bars show the percentage of pre-mitigation tests that came back at or above the EPA action level of 4 pCi/L.

Boulder County43.8%
Colorado statewide46.9%

CDPHE 2005–2024

Boulder County tests 3.1 percentage points lower than the statewide average — but any home can still test high.
Colorado Radon Check services Boulder County

Get a free quote for radon mitigation in Boulder County.

We’re NRPP-certified and Colorado state-licensed. A typical sub-slab depressurization install runs about $1,500 and reduces indoor radon by 95%+ in most Boulder County homes.

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Boulder County radon questions

What level of radon is dangerous?
The EPA recommends mitigation at 4 pCi/L or higher. Between 2 and 4 pCi/L, you should consider mitigation — long-term exposure at this range still carries lung-cancer risk. Below 2 pCi/L, the EPA suggests retesting every two years.
How much does radon mitigation cost in Colorado?
A standard sub-slab depressurization system in Colorado typically runs $1,200–$2,500, with $1,500 the most common all-in price. That single system reduces indoor radon by 95% or more in the majority of homes. Crawlspace installs cost more ($2,000–$5,000) because the membrane and tie-ins are more involved.
Why are radon levels elevated in Boulder County?
Geology drives most of it. Granitic bedrock and uranium-bearing soils — common across Colorado — release radon as they decay, and Front Range building style (basements, tight envelopes, forced-air systems) concentrates that gas indoors. Higher-elevation counties also tend to have lower atmospheric pressure, which can pull radon up through the foundation more aggressively.