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EMF Testing

Your home or workspace may look calm on the surface, but invisible electromagnetic fields (EMFs) can significantly influence sleep quality, stress levels, cognitive function, and overall well-being. Our EMF Testing & Mitigation service provides a thorough, science-based evaluation of your environment using professional instruments and Building Biology health guidelines.

 

The goal is simple: help you understand your exposure and provide clear, practical steps to reduce it.

 

We assess all four major types of EMFs identified
by the Building Biology Institute:

  • Electric Fields (from wiring, appliances, and ungrounded devices)

  • Magnetic Fields (from power lines, motors, electrical panels, and wiring errors)

  • Radiofrequency Radiation (from Wi-Fi, cell towers, phones, smart meters, Bluetooth, and wireless devices)

  • Dirty Electricity (high-frequency voltage transients from modern electronics and solar inverters)

 

Each EMF type has different characteristics, sources, and mitigation strategies. By analyzing all four together, we provide a clear and complete picture of how your indoor environment functions and how it may be impacting your health.

 

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Our assessment includes:

  • Interior & Exterior Survey: Mapping EMF hotspots throughout the home, identifying problem areas around bedrooms, workspaces, appliances, and exterior sources such as nearby towers or smart meters.

  • Bedroom & Sleep Sanctuary Evaluation: Focusing on nighttime exposures that can affect circadian rhythms, cell repair, and overall recovery.

  • Source Identification: Pinpointing where EMFs originate—wiring issues, faulty devices, wireless equipment, neighbor sources, or infrastructure outside the home.

  • Full Measurement Data: Electric and magnetic field readings, RF signal strength and modulation, dirty electricity levels, distance-based exposure modeling, and documentation of relevant building conditions.

  • Low-EMF Technology Review: Assessing your Wi-Fi setup, routers, smart home devices, wiring practices, and power distribution to identify unnecessary exposure.

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