Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas. It forms as uranium in soil and rock breaks down, and outdoors it disperses harmlessly into the open air. The trouble begins when it seeps into an enclosed space — through foundation cracks, sump openings, gaps around pipes — and accumulates in the lowest levels of a home, where you can't see, smell, or taste it.
Over years of exposure, that buildup matters. Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer in Canada after smoking, and it is the number-one cause among people who have never smoked. Health Canada attributes about 16 per cent of lung cancer deaths in the country to radon, which works out to more than 3,200 deaths every year. Those are sobering figures, and they are exactly why the gas is worth a few minutes of your attention.
The reassuring flip side is that radon is both measurable and reducible. Unlike many household health concerns, this one has a clear guideline, a straightforward test, and a proven fix. If you want the full picture of how radon behaves and what it does inside a home, our complete homeowner's guide to radon in Canadian homes covers the science in depth. For this article, the goal is narrower and more practical: figure out where your region lands, and what to do about your own four walls.