A note before you read. This article is general health and home-testing information for Burlington-area homeowners and renters, drawn from publicly available Health Canada, CARST, Halton Region Public Health, Tarion, and Canadian Cancer Society materials. It is not medical advice and is not legal advice. See full disclaimers at the bottom.
Burlington sits in Halton Region between Oakville and Hamilton, on glacial deposits over sedimentary bedrock typical of the broader Niagara Escarpment region. Health Canada's 2012 Cross-Canada Radon Survey places Ontario at roughly the Canadian national average — about 7% of homes at or above the 200 Bq/m³ Health Canada residential guideline — with substantial regional variation. Burlington's mix of mature lakeside neighbourhoods and active new-build subdivisions in north Burlington (Alton Village, Headon Forest, Tyandaga) warrants routine residential radon testing.
TL;DR for Burlington homeowners and renters
- Health Canada residential guideline: 200 Bq/m³ (Health Canada — Radon: About).
- Test your Burlington home with a 91-day long-term alpha-track test in the lowest lived-in level during the heating season (October–April).
- Order a $89 long-term radon test kit →
- Ontario new builds with APS signed on or after February 1, 2021 may qualify for up to $50,000 of Tarion radon mitigation coverage within a 7-year window. Meeting qualification criteria does not guarantee a claim will be approved.
Table of contents
- Why Burlington homes need testing
- What Ontario data show
- How to test your Burlington home
- Mitigation in Burlington
- Ontario new-home buyers: Tarion coverage
- Real estate & disclosure in Ontario
- Renters in Burlington
- FAQ — Burlington-specific questions
- Order your test kit
- Important disclaimers
- Sources & further reading
Why Burlington homes need testing
Burlington sits on glacial deposits over sedimentary bedrock at the western end of Lake Ontario, near the Niagara Escarpment. The underlying geology can include uranium-bearing parent material in localized sub-areas, particularly in the escarpment foothills. Combined with Burlington's housing stock — mature lakeside neighbourhoods plus new-build subdivisions in north Burlington — radon testing is warranted.
Three factors:
- Geology. Glacial deposits over sedimentary bedrock, with proximity to the Niagara Escarpment producing localized variation in soil-gas conditions.
- Long heating season. Southern Ontario winters drive months of furnace operation, producing stack-effect pressure differentials.
- Building stock. Burlington has heritage homes plus extensive newer-subdivision construction with finished basements used as living space — exactly where radon concentrates.
Halton Region Public Health has historically supported radon awareness programming.
What Ontario data show
Health Canada's 2012 Cross-Canada Radon Survey reports Ontario at roughly the Canadian average overall (~7% of homes ≥ 200 Bq/m³), with substantial regional variation. The western GTA generally shows lower prevalence than northeastern Ontario, but home-to-home variability is large. Test your specific home.
How to test your Burlington home
Per Health Canada's published guidance (Guide for Radon Measurements in Residential Dwellings), the Canadian residential standard is a long-term test of at least 91 days using an alpha-track or electret detector, deployed in the lowest lived-in level during the heating season (October–April).
For most Burlington homes:
- Finished basement if used as a bedroom, home office, gym, rec room, or rental suite — that's where to test.
- Lowest sleeping level if the basement is unfinished.
- Main floor only if the home has no basement.
Place the kit at breathing height (1–2 metres), away from drafts, exterior walls, windows, and HVAC supply registers. Keep it in place for at least 91 days, then return to the lab.
Order your $89 long-term radon test kit →
Mitigation in Burlington
If your test exceeds 200 Bq/m³, the standard Canadian fix is active sub-slab depressurization (SSD). Typical Burlington-area cost: $2,500–$4,500 for a standard SSD installation.
Always use a C-NRPP-certified Mitigation Professional. Verify on the C-NRPP Find a Professional directory, filter by Ontario.
For the full mitigator-selection playbook, see our How to Choose a Licensed Radon Mitigator in Canada guide. After mitigation, run an independent post-mitigation test.
Ontario new-home buyers: Tarion coverage
North Burlington (Alton Village and surrounding) has had significant new-build subdivision growth. If you bought a new home with APS signed on or after February 1, 2021, Tarion's new-home warranty may include coverage of up to $50,000 for radon mitigation, within a 7-year window. Meeting qualification criteria does not guarantee a claim will be approved. See our Tarion Radon Warranty Claim Guide.
Real estate & disclosure in Ontario
Ontario does not require radon disclosure on the standard SPIS, but the doctrine of latent defects (under common law and Ontario case law including Sevidal v. Chopra) generally creates an obligation to disclose known material latent defects. A confirmed elevated radon test is generally the kind of information a court might consider material — consult an Ontario real estate lawyer for any specific transaction.
For the full real-estate playbook, see Radon and Real Estate in Canada.
Renters in Burlington
Ontario's Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 generally requires landlords to maintain rental units in a "good state of repair and fit for habitation." Burlington renters in basement apartments should consider testing their unit. See our Radon for Canadian Renters (2026) guide.
FAQ — Burlington-specific questions
Is radon a real concern in Burlington? Yes. Ontario sits at roughly the Canadian average for residential radon prevalence per Health Canada's 2012 Cross-Canada Radon Survey. The only way to know your specific home's level is to test.
What's the action level for radon in Burlington? 200 Bq/m³ — the Health Canada residential guideline.
How do I test my Burlington home? Use a 3-month (≥91-day) long-term alpha-track test from a C-NRPP-recognized lab, placed in the lowest lived-in level during the heating season. Cost: $89 all-in for a RadonTest.ca kit.
How much does radon mitigation cost in Burlington? Typical: $2,500–$4,500 for standard sub-slab depressurization (SSD).
Does Tarion cover radon mitigation for new homes in Burlington? Up to $50,000 for qualifying new builds with APS signed on or after February 1, 2021, within a 7-year window. Meeting qualification criteria does not guarantee claim approval. See our Tarion claim guide.
Does proximity to the Niagara Escarpment affect Burlington radon? The Niagara Escarpment includes localized geological variation that can affect soil-gas conditions in Burlington's escarpment foothills neighbourhoods. The only way to know your specific home's level is to test.
Is there a Halton Region Public Health radon program? Halton Region Public Health has historically supported radon awareness programming. Check directly for current offerings.
Can I use the Lungs Matter grant in Burlington? The Canadian Lung Association's Lungs Matter program offers up to $1,500 toward radon mitigation for eligible Canadian homeowners. Verify eligibility directly.
Should I retest after mitigation? Yes — Health Canada generally recommends retesting after mitigation and after major renovations.
Do newer Burlington subdivisions have lower radon than older neighbourhoods? Not necessarily. Newer Canadian homes have tighter envelopes, which can either reduce or amplify radon depending on construction details. Test your specific home.
Order your test kit
Order your $89 all-in long-term test kit →
Long-term 91-day alpha-track test kit. C-NRPP-listed device. Analysed at Lex Scientific in Guelph, Ontario — Canadian lab, C-NRPP listed, ISO/IEC 17025 accredited by CALA. Tracked Canadian shipping both ways. Written lab report PDF delivered to your inbox.
Ships across Halton Region including Burlington, Oakville, Milton, Halton Hills, and surrounding municipalities.
Important disclaimers
Not medical, legal, or warranty advice. Consult qualified Ontario professionals for any specific transaction, claim, or installation decision.
Statistics and citations. Ontario radon prevalence figures are drawn from Health Canada's Cross-Canada Survey of Radon Concentrations in Homes (2012). Figures cited reflect the sources as of May 2026.
Local data. Western GTA radon prevalence is generally lower than higher-prevalence Ontario regions, but home-to-home variability is large, and Niagara Escarpment proximity adds localized variation. Test your specific home.
Mitigation cost. The $2,500–$4,500 Canadian residential SSD cost range reflects typical Canadian pricing as of 2026. Actual quoted prices vary.
Tarion qualification hedge. Coverage depends on APS date, test type and timing, professional qualifications, and other Tarion-specific rules. Meeting the qualification criteria does not guarantee a claim will be approved.
Lungs Matter grant. Eligibility, grant amounts, and program availability may change. Verify directly at lung.ca before relying on the program.
No diagnosis or treatment claims. RadonTest.ca sells radon test kits. We do not diagnose, treat, or prevent disease.
No warranty as to completeness. RadonTest.ca makes no warranty as to the completeness or accuracy of the information herein and accepts no liability for decisions made in reliance on this article.
Sources & further reading
Burlington/Ontario-specific
Health Canada / national
- Health Canada — Radon: About
- Cross-Canada Survey of Radon Concentrations in Homes (2012)
- Guide for Radon Measurements in Residential Dwellings
- Canadian Cancer Society — Radon
- Canadian Lung Association — Lungs Matter
- C-NRPP — Find a Professional
- CARST
- Take Action on Radon
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