Radon Inspection Report Software
Continuous monitor data integration, EPA-aligned reporting, plain-language client explanations. Used by 400+ inspectors. 90-day free trial.
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What a radon inspection covers
A radon inspection measures radon gas concentration in a home over a defined time window (typically 48 hours minimum, often 96 hours or 7 days). The inspector deploys a continuous radon monitor or activated charcoal/electret device, records the deployment conditions, and reports the average concentration along with environmental data.
Key elements every radon report needs:
- Test method — continuous monitor brand/model, charcoal canister, electret, etc.
- Test location — lowest livable level, room, height
- Test duration — start and end timestamps
- Test conditions — closed-house conditions verified, HVAC settings, weather
- Result — average pCi/L plus min/max from a continuous monitor
- Interpretation — EPA action level (4 pCi/L), mitigation recommendation if applicable
The report needs to be clear enough that a homeowner can read the number, understand what it means, and decide whether to mitigate.
How InspectorData supports radon inspections
The mobile app captures deployment details — location photo, timestamps, monitor info — at the property. When you retrieve the device, upload the data file or enter the average reading.
For continuous monitors, paste or upload the hourly data and the platform graphs it automatically. The graph appears in the final PDF, showing the radon concentration over the test window — useful for client trust and useful when results are borderline (3.8 pCi/L vs. 4.2 pCi/L tells different stories).
The radon-specific comment library includes:
- Closed-house conditions language
- HVAC verification language
- Mitigation recommendation language (post-mitigation re-test required, professional installer recommended)
- Borderline-result language for results in the 2-4 pCi/L range
- Re-test recommendation language
Standalone or bundled
Radon often runs alongside a standard home inspection. InspectorData lets you produce one combined report with both sections, or two separate reports if the client wants them separated.
Why radon inspectors switch software
Radon reports have a quality problem in the industry — many inspectors deliver a number with no context. The homeowner gets "3.6 pCi/L" and doesn't know what to do with it.
InspectorData's radon templates explain. The result is a number, then a graph, then plain-language interpretation: "Below the 4 pCi/L EPA action level. Levels in this range may still warrant retesting in winter when ventilation is reduced. No mitigation is recommended at this time, but homeowners may consider monitoring annually."
That's the difference between a report that gets read and a report that gets filed and forgotten.
Try it free
90-day free trial. No credit card required. Run real inspections through the platform, get carrier and client feedback, decide based on actual use.
See pricing for full details. For a live walkthrough see demo.
Frequently asked questions
What continuous monitor brands does it support?
Most major brands export CSV or text files that paste into the platform. Specific brand integrations are added on request — let us know what you use.
Does it support charcoal canister and electret tests?
Yes. Manual entry of average pCi/L, plus all the deployment metadata and report context.
Will the report include a graph?
Yes if you upload continuous-monitor hourly data. The graph appears in the PDF showing radon over the test window.
How does it handle closed-house conditions verification?
Comment library has standard verification language; the inspector confirms what conditions were met and the report documents them.
Can I batch radon reports?
Yes. Run multiple radon tests in parallel, organize by client, generate reports individually or in bulk.
Does it follow EPA protocols?
The report formats and threshold language align with EPA radon-testing guidance. Inspector signs the final report and is responsible for protocol compliance.
Can radon reports combine with home inspection reports?
Yes. A combined report has a clearly-marked radon section. Clients can also receive radon as a standalone PDF if preferred.