Indoor Air Quality Inspectors Inc.
Licensed Provider: TRACY PEEPLES

EPA zone context: Mississippi is mainly Zone 2 and Zone 3, with lower statewide averages than Appalachian and Upper Midwest states.
Licensed Provider: TRACY PEEPLES
Radon levels vary house-to-house even in the same city. Testing your own home is the only reliable way to know your risk.
No. EPA zoning is predictive, and the only property-specific answer comes from a test result.
Yes. Unsealed crawlspace soils can feed radon into living areas through floor and utility openings.
Most homeowners in Mississippi see mitigation quotes in the low-thousands, but the final cost depends on foundation type, fan location, and pipe routing complexity. A cost calculator can help you benchmark estimates before requesting bids.
Yes. A valid short-term or long-term test is the fastest way to confirm if mitigation is needed and to scope the right system design.
EPA recommends action at 4.0 pCi/L, and many homeowners choose to reduce levels even below that threshold. Mississippi is mainly Zone 2 and Zone 3, with lower statewide averages than Appalachian and Upper Midwest states. ZIP-level lookup tools are useful for local context, but home testing is still required.
Look for current NRPP or NRSB credentials, ask for post-mitigation test expectations, and confirm local compliance details. Mississippi does not have a separate statewide mitigator licensing regime; national certification remains the main credential check.
Estimate likely project pricing by foundation type and system complexity.
Learn when and how to test, plus how to interpret pCi/L results.
See how state-level risk varies and what zone maps can and cannot tell you.
Check projected local risk by ZIP code before you request quotes.