Radon Mitigation in La Crosse, WI
La Crosse anchors the western Wisconsin Coulee Region, the Driftless bluff country where timbered ridges rise along the Mississippi River and neighborhoods tuck into the coulees below. Many homes here are older, and some sit built into or near the bluffs on hillside lots. Radon does not read that scenery, though. It seeps up from the soil and rock beneath any foundation, and the only way to know a La Crosse home's level is to test. Whether a reading turned up during a home sale or a winter test, Badger State Radon connects local homeowners with independent radon professionals. We are a free matching service, not a contractor, and this page lays out what radon looks like here and what to do about it.
Radon in La Crosse and the Coulee Region
La Crosse County is EPA Radon Zone 2 (predicted average indoor level of 2 to 4 pCi/L), cited to the EPA Map of Radon Zones. That is the lower of the two categories that apply in this state, but it is not an all-clear: Every Wisconsin county is EPA Radon Zone 1 or Zone 2. The state has no Zone 3 county. About one in 10 Wisconsin homes is above the action level of 4.0 pCi/L, per WI DHS. A zone is a countywide screening designation, not a home-specific prediction, so your street and even your next-door neighbor can differ. The reliable move is to test your own home. You can check area readings on the WI DHS radon results map.
Testing your La Crosse home
The regional Radon Information Center serves the Coulee Region, and statewide 17 Radon Information Centers offer kits for about $15 including lab analysis. A short-term charcoal test takes just a few days, which suits a sale, while a long-term test gives a better year-round average. Winter is peak testing season here, since closed-up homes let radon build. If a short-term test is at or above 4.0 pCi/L, the EPA recommends confirming with a follow-up test. See radon testing for the full rundown, and reach the state radon line at 1-888-LOW-RADON (1-888-569-7236).
Homes on private wells
Across the rural stretches of the Coulee Region, many homes draw from private wells, and radon can travel in well water as well as in soil gas. Radon leaves the water when it is used for showers, laundry, and dishes, adding to the level in the air. If your La Crosse-area home is on a well, it is worth a separate look. Our page on radon in water explains when a water radon test makes sense and how treatment works, alongside the standard air test.
Mitigation and cost
If a test comes back high, the common fix is active sub-slab depressurization: a pipe and a continuously running fan that vents radon above the roofline. Sealing cracks alone is not a fix. Wisconsin DHS estimates a system typically costs $1,000 to $2,000, and La Crosse homes fall in that range by foundation and design. Learn how systems work on the radon mitigation page. The independent professionals we match you with can hold the voluntary NRPP or NRSB credentials; we do not perform the work or hold any certification ourselves. For the statewide picture, the Wisconsin radon guide ties it together.