Lincoln Radon Specialists helps homeowners across Lincoln and Lancaster County with the full path from a concerning test result to a verified fix: mitigation system installation, crawl space mitigation, testing and retesting, and repair of existing systems. Most people arrive here with a number from a radon test and a question about what happens next — this page maps the options so you can see which one fits your situation, then call or request a quote.
This is the main event for most Lincoln homes: an active sub-slab depressurization system. A suction point is opened through the basement slab (or an existing sump pit is used), a sealed pipe runs from that point up and out of the house, and an inline fan pulls soil gas out from under the foundation before it can enter your living space. A small U-tube gauge called a manometer shows at a glance that the system is running. Most standard installations are completed in a day, and a follow-up test confirms the drop.
Homes with crawl spaces — common in older Lincoln neighborhoods, additions, and acreage properties around Lancaster County — need a different approach. Instead of pulling air from under a slab, a heavy membrane is sealed over the exposed soil and the system draws from beneath it. Houses that combine a basement with a crawl space often need both techniques working together.
Testing is how everything starts and how everything gets verified. That includes first-time tests for homeowners who have never checked their levels, follow-up tests when a real estate transaction result seems surprising, and post-mitigation retests that confirm a newly installed system brought the number down where it belongs. If you already have a recent result in hand, you usually don't need a new test to talk about mitigation — bring the number you have.
Radon fans run continuously and typically last years, but not forever. If your fan has gone silent, the manometer fluid is sitting level, or you bought a house with a system nobody ever explained, the system may not be protecting you at all. Repairs range from a straightforward fan swap to rerouting or resealing an older installation that no longer meets current standards.
You don't have to figure that out before reaching out. If you have a test result, share the number. If your existing system looks dead, say so. The right service becomes obvious within the first few minutes of a phone call, and there's no obligation attached to asking. Use the quote form and describe what's going on in plain language.
Request a QuoteOne conversation about your test result is enough to find out what fixing it involves. Call or send the quote form — whichever is easier.