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Complete Minnesota Pricing Guide · Updated 2026

Radon Mitigation Cost in 2026 — Minnesota Pricing Guide

Real Minnesota radon mitigation pricing data: $1,200–$2,500 typical install, $1,200–$1,800 median. System-by-system pricing, real estate transaction costs, factors that affect price, FHA/USDA/VA loan implications.

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Minnesota Radon Mitigation Cost Breakdown by System Type

Five system types cover essentially all Minnesota residential and commercial scenarios. Pricing varies by foundation type, home size, and installation complexity.

Minnesota Radon Mitigation Cost by System Type (2026)
System TypeCost RangeMedian CostLifespanBest For
Active Sub-Slab Depressurization (ASD)$800 – $2,200$1,30020+ yr piping / 5–10 yr fanMost Minnesota basements (~80% of installs)
Sub-Membrane Depressurization$1,500 – $3,500$2,40015–20 yrMinnesota homes with crawl spaces
Block-Wall Depressurization$2,000 – $4,000$2,80015–20 yrOlder Minnesota homes (pre-1980)
Drain-Tile Depressurization$1,500 – $3,500$2,20015–20 yrHomes with existing perimeter drain tile
Passive System Retrofit$500 – $1,500$90020+ yrNew construction passive ready
All costs include post-mitigation verification testing per AARST-ANSI standards. Minnesota NRPP + MDH certified contractor required by state law.

Minnesota Radon Mitigation Cost by City (2026)

Pricing variation across Minnesota cities reflects local labor costs and partner contractor availability. All cities served by Minnesota Radon Experts network.

Rochester-by-City Radon Mitigation Cost Estimates (2026)
RochesterCountyTypical Mitigation CostAvg Closing Time
MinneapolisHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
St. PaulRamsey County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
RochesterOlmsted County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
DuluthSt. Louis County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
BloomingtonHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
St. CloudStearns County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
PlymouthHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
Maple GroveHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
WoodburyWashington County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
EaganDakota County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
Eden PrairieHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
MinnetonkaHennepin County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
BurnsvilleDakota County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
MankatoBlue Earth County$1,200 – $2,5001–3 weeks
Costs include post-mitigation verification testing and are planning estimates, not contractor quotes. Final pricing is set by the partner contractor after a free on-site assessment. Data current as of 2026-Q2.

Why Minnesota Radon Mitigation Costs What It Does

Minnesota radon mitigation pricing reflects several structural factors:

  • Materials cost: Schedule 40 PVC piping (3-4 inch), continuous-duty radon fan, manometer, sealing materials, electrical components total $250-$500 per typical install.
  • Labor: 4-8 hours of NRPP-certified specialist labor at $75-$125/hour = $300-$1,000.
  • Equipment: Diamond core drill, sealing supplies, vacuum testing equipment, PVC cutting/joining tools amortized across installs.
  • Insurance: Minnesota contractors carry $1M+ general liability coverage; this is amortized into pricing.
  • Certification maintenance: NRPP recertification fees + MDH licensing + AARST-ANSI continuing education.
  • Vehicle and overhead: Service vehicle, fuel, scheduling/dispatch infrastructure.
  • Post-mitigation testing: 48-96 hour verification test using CRM (continuous radon monitor) device.

The cost structure means rock-bottom pricing under $700 generally signals either (1) cut corners on sealing or verification testing, (2) substandard equipment, or (3) uncertified work. Minnesota law requires NRPP + MDH certified mitigation — any quote that doesn't reference these credentials is a warning sign.

The American Lung Association's 2024 Healthcare Provider Decision Support Tool quotes a national typical radon mitigation cost of $1,500-$2,000 when recommending mitigation for any home testing at or above the EPA action level of 4.0 pCi/L. Minnesota partner-contractor pricing of $1,200-$2,500 reflects regional labor cost variation; the typical Minnesota install lands toward the lower end of the ALA-cited range for active sub-slab depressurization on standard basement foundations.

Ongoing cost · monthly operating expense

How Much Does a Radon Mitigation System Cost Per Month to Run in Minnesota?

An active radon mitigation system in Minnesota costs $10–$14 per month to operate. The breakdown: $6–$8/month in fan electricity (a typical 65-watt continuous-duty radon fan uses about 47 kWh/month, billed at Minnesota's 2025 average residential rate of $0.135/kWh per EIA); $3–$5/month in amortized fan replacement (radon fans last 5–8 years and cost $250–$400 to replace); and ~$1/month in amortized biennial re-testing ($15–$30 short-term test kit every 2 years as EPA recommends). The monthly operating cost is minor compared to the $1,200–$2,500 one-time install.

Minnesota Radon Mitigation Monthly Operating Cost Breakdown (2026)
Cost ComponentMonthly CostCalculation
Fan electricity$6 – $865W continuous × ~47 kWh/mo × $0.135/kWh (Minnesota avg residential rate, EIA 2025)
Fan replacement (amortized)$3 – $5$250–$400 fan ÷ 60–96 months (5–8 yr typical lifespan)
Biennial re-testing (amortized)~$1$15–$30 short-term test kit every 2 years (EPA-recommended cadence)
Optional CRM monitor$0Continuous radon monitor is $150–$500 one-time if you want real-time visibility
TOTAL all-in monthly$10 – $14Typical Minnesota home with active sub-slab depressurization
TOTAL annual$120 – $170First 5-7 years; year of fan replacement: add $350–$600 one-time
Costs assume a 65W RadonAway-class continuous-duty fan (industry standard for active sub-slab depressurization). Higher-flow systems (Festa AMG, Fantech) draw 80-120W which adds $2-$4/mo. Minnesota electricity rates vary by utility (MidAmerican Energy, Alliant Energy, Minnesota municipal co-ops); rates above are the 2025 EIA state average. Actual costs are confirmed during your post-mitigation site inspection by your certified Minnesota partner contractor.

The bigger picture: $10–$14/month ≈ $120–$170 per year in ongoing radon protection. Compared to EPA's estimate of ~21,000 annual US lung cancer deaths attributable to radon — and lifetime lung cancer treatment costs of $75,000–$300,000+ per case — the operating cost of a mitigation system is among the highest-ROI ongoing safety expenses a Minnesota homeowner can carry, especially given Minnesota's 4.4 pCi/L state average (over twice the EPA action level of 4.0 pCi/L).

These are planning estimates derived from public-data inputs. Final monthly operating cost is confirmed during your post-mitigation site inspection by your NRPP + MDH certified Minnesota partner contractor. Minnesota Radon Experts is a lead-routing service — we do not perform mitigation work ourselves.

FAQ

Minnesota Radon Mitigation Cost FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does radon mitigation cost in 2026?
In Minnesota, residential radon mitigation costs $1,200-$2,500 installed, with a median around $1,400. Active sub-slab depressurization (the most common method) runs $800-$2,200. Crawl space sub-membrane systems cost $1,500-$3,500. Block-wall depressurization for older homes runs $2,000-$4,000. Nationally, costs range from $700-$3,000 depending on state, foundation type, and local labor rates. Minnesota pricing is in line with national averages for sub-slab depressurization.
What factors affect radon mitigation cost?
Six factors drive radon mitigation pricing: (1) Foundation type — poured-concrete is cheapest; block-wall and crawl space cost more. (2) Home size — larger basements may need multiple suction points (+$300-$500 each). (3) Piping route — interior through finished spaces costs more than basement/exterior routing. (4) Fan specification — higher-CFM models for larger systems add $100-$300. (5) Accessibility — tight access points or extensive sealing adds labor. (6) Permit and verification testing inclusion — quality installs include post-mitigation testing in the quote.
Is radon mitigation covered by homeowners insurance?
Generally no. Standard homeowners insurance policies in Minnesota do not cover radon mitigation because radon is considered a pre-existing condition rather than sudden damage. Some specialty policies and HSAs (Health Savings Accounts) may cover radon mitigation as a health-related expense, particularly if a household member has a documented respiratory condition. Always check your specific policy. The IRS does allow radon mitigation as a tax-deductible medical expense when prescribed by a physician for a household member with documented respiratory illness — consult a tax advisor.
Do real estate sellers pay for radon mitigation in Minnesota?
In Minnesota real estate transactions, roughly 60% of radon mitigations are seller-paid, 30% are cost-shared or credited at closing, and 10% are buyer-paid. Minnesota law does not mandate who pays — this is negotiated after an elevated test result. Many Minnesota listing agents recommend pre-listing radon testing so sellers can either mitigate proactively (improving marketability) or price-adjust before listing. Pre-listing mitigation also avoids closing-timeline scheduling pressure.
Are there hidden costs in radon mitigation quotes?
Watch for: (1) Post-mitigation verification testing — should be included; if quoted separately, expect $100-$250. (2) Permit fees — typically not required in Minnesota for residential mitigation but can apply for commercial or HUD properties. (3) Electrical work — some installs require new dedicated 110V circuit for the fan ($100-$300). (4) Cosmetic restoration — drywall patching or finished-basement restoration after install ($150-$500). (5) Long-pipe runs — exterior routing through multiple stories adds materials cost. (6) Sealing of slab cracks beyond standard scope. Reputable Minnesota partners disclose all of these upfront in writing.
How can I get the best price on radon mitigation?
Five strategies: (1) Get 2-3 quotes for non-emergency installs — competitive pricing is healthy in Minnesota. (2) Schedule during off-peak season (May-August) — lower demand often means flexibility. (3) Avoid emergency-timeline mitigations when possible — closing-timeline expedites can add 10-20%. (4) Verify the quote includes post-mitigation verification testing. (5) Ask about combined services if you also need radon testing — bundled pricing is often offered. Minnesota Radon Experts network partners provide transparent itemized quotes; ask for line-item breakdowns.
Can radon mitigation cost be financed?
Yes. Most Minnesota NRPP-certified mitigation contractors offer financing through Synchrony, GreenSky, or similar contractor-finance platforms. Typical terms: $0 down, 0-12 month interest-free options, or 24-60 month installment plans. Minnesota Energy Bank loans (low-interest residential improvement loans) may also be available for radon mitigation in some cases. PACE financing is not commonly used for residential radon mitigation in Minnesota. Always compare total cost-with-interest vs paying cash.
What are FHA loan radon mitigation requirements and costs?
FHA loans do not legally require radon testing or mitigation as of 2026, but HUD Handbook 4000.1 strongly encourages it. Some FHA underwriters in high-radon states (Minnesota is #1) request radon test results during underwriting, and Minnesota FHA appraisers may flag elevated radon as a property condition issue requiring mitigation before closing. When required for FHA closing, mitigation costs typically run $1,200-$2,500 — the same as private transactions. The seller is most commonly responsible for FHA-required mitigation, though this is negotiable.
What is the long-term cost of NOT mitigating elevated radon?
EPA estimates radon causes ~21,000 lung cancer deaths annually in the US — second only to smoking. In Minnesota (4.4 pCi/L state average, more than 2x the EPA action level), a household exposed to typical Minnesota radon levels for 20 years faces a measurably elevated lung cancer risk. The American Cancer Society estimates lifetime medical costs for lung cancer treatment range from $75,000-$300,000+ per case. Compared to the one-time $1,200-$2,500 cost of mitigation, the cost-benefit math favors mitigation overwhelmingly for elevated-reading homes.
How does radon mitigation cost in Minnesota compare to other states?
Minnesota radon mitigation costs are in line with the national median for sub-slab depressurization systems ($1,200-$2,500). High-cost states: California, Massachusetts, Connecticut ($1,500-$4,000+ typical). Low-cost states: Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri ($600-$1,800 typical). Minnesota pricing reflects: (1) average labor costs, (2) cold-climate housing stock with basements (most common foundation type for mitigation), (3) competitive Minnesota contractor market (~100 active NRPP-certified mitigation specialists statewide per the MDH credentialed-contractor list), and (4) state MDH licensing requirements that ensure quality standards.
How much does a radon mitigation system cost per month to run in Minnesota?
In Minnesota, an active radon mitigation system costs about $10-$14 per month to operate. Breakdown: $6-$8 in fan electricity (a typical 65-watt continuous-duty radon fan runs 24/7 and uses about 47 kWh/month at Minnesota's 2025 average residential electricity rate of $0.135/kWh per EIA); $3-$5 in amortized fan replacement (radon fans last 5-8 years and cost $250-$400 to replace); and approximately $1 in amortized biennial re-testing ($15-$30 short-term test kit every 2 years as EPA recommends). The monthly operating cost is minor compared to the $1,200-$2,500 one-time install — and an order of magnitude below the lifetime health cost of unmitigated elevated radon.
What are the ongoing maintenance costs of a radon mitigation system in Minnesota?
Three components for a Minnesota active radon mitigation system: (1) Electricity for the continuous-duty radon fan, roughly $72-$96/year at Minnesota's residential electricity rates. (2) Fan replacement every 5-8 years ($250-$400 in parts plus $100-$200 in labor if a pro reinstalls). (3) Biennial re-testing per EPA recommendation ($15-$30 DIY short-term kit or $100+ for a professional test). Optional: a continuous radon monitor (CRM) for real-time visibility runs $150-$500 one-time. Annual ongoing cost: typically $120-$170 for the first 5-7 years, then a one-time bump of $350-$600 in the year you replace the fan.

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