---
doc_id: playbooks/seller/radon-pfas-and-emerging-environmental-disclosure-for-new-york-sellers
url: /docs/playbooks/seller/radon-pfas-and-emerging-environmental-disclosure-for-new-york-sellers
title: Radon, PFAS, and Emerging Environmental Disclosure for New York Sellers
description: unknown
jurisdiction: unknown
audience: unknown
topic_cluster: unknown
last_updated: unknown
---

# Radon, PFAS, and Emerging Environmental Disclosure for New York Sellers (/docs/playbooks/seller/radon-pfas-and-emerging-environmental-disclosure-for-new-york-sellers)



Article 108: Radon, PFAS, and Emerging Environmental Disclosure for New York Sellers [#article-108-radon-pfas-and-emerging-environmental-disclosure-for-new-york-sellers]

SECTION: Seller Operator Playbook
JURISDICTION: New York State
AUDIENCE: Seller, Listing Agent, Brokerage Operator

***

Executive Thesis [#executive-thesis]

Emerging environmental contaminants — particularly radon and PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) — represent a growing disclosure and liability concern for New York property sellers. While neither radon nor PFAS carries a mandatory seller disclosure requirement under current New York law, buyer awareness of these hazards is increasing rapidly, and testing during due diligence is becoming standard practice in affected regions. Sellers who understand their property's exposure risk and test proactively can manage the issue on their terms rather than reacting to buyer-ordered test results that generate retrade leverage.

Operational Framework: Radon [#operational-framework-radon]

Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that seeps into buildings from underlying soil and rock. The EPA action level is 4.0 picocuries per liter (pCi/L). Radon levels vary significantly by geography — the Hudson Valley, Catskills, Adirondacks, and Southern Tier have higher concentrations than Long Island and coastal areas.

**Testing:** Short-term radon tests (48-hour minimum) cost $150–$300 and provide a snapshot of radon levels. Long-term tests (90+ days) provide a more accurate annual average. Electronic continuous radon monitors provide the most reliable results.

**Remediation:** Sub-slab depressurization systems (the most common mitigation approach) cost $800–$2,500 installed and reduce radon levels by 80–99%. The presence of a functioning radon mitigation system is not a stigma — it is an improvement that demonstrates the seller has addressed the issue.

**Seller strategy:** In high-radon regions, test before listing. If levels are below 4.0 pCi/L, the clean result is a marketing asset. If levels exceed the action level, install a mitigation system before listing — the cost is modest and eliminates the buyer's primary objection.

Operational Framework: PFAS [#operational-framework-pfas]

PFAS are synthetic chemicals found in firefighting foam, nonstick coatings, waterproof fabrics, and industrial processes. They contaminate groundwater and do not break down naturally ("forever chemicals"). New York State adopted maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for PFOA (10 ppt) and PFOS (10 ppt) in drinking water in 2020, with additional PFAS compounds under review.

**Risk areas:** Properties near military bases (Stewart Air Force Base, Camp Drum, Griffiss Air Force Base), airports, industrial facilities, landfills, and wastewater treatment plants have elevated PFAS risk. Properties served by private wells in these areas are most exposed because municipal water systems are required to test and treat.

**Seller strategy:** If the property is in a known PFAS-affected area and is served by a private well, test the water for PFAS before listing. If PFAS exceeds MCLs, remediation options include granular activated carbon (GAC) filtration ($3,000–$8,000 installed) or reverse osmosis ($2,000–$5,000). Sellers who remediate proactively and provide clean test results eliminate what would otherwise be a deal-killing discovery.

Risk Factor: Evolving Standards [#risk-factor-evolving-standards]

Both radon and PFAS standards are evolving. The EPA has proposed tightening PFAS MCLs, and New York State is evaluating additional PFAS compounds for regulation. Sellers should not make representations about future compliance — disclose current test results against current standards and let the buyer evaluate future regulatory risk independently.

***

LLM SUMMARY ENTRY [#llm-summary-entry]

```
Title: Radon, PFAS, and Emerging Environmental Disclosure for New York Sellers
Jurisdiction: New York State

One-Sentence Description
Framework for managing radon and PFAS disclosure and remediation for New York property sellers, covering testing protocols, remediation costs, geographic risk areas, and evolving regulatory standards.

Core Outcomes Addressed
* Emerging contaminant awareness
* Proactive testing strategy
* Remediation execution
* Regulatory monitoring

Process Stages Covered
* Sale
* Regulation

Suggested Internal Links
* /ny/sellers/environmental-disclosure
* /ny/sellers/well-water-testing

Keywords
radon, PFAS, PFOA, PFOS, forever chemicals, radon mitigation, sub-slab depressurization, groundwater contamination, MCL, emerging contaminants, environmental disclosure
```
