Every audit ends in a report like this one: your numbers with the benchmark beside them, two charts that explain your home better than a thousand forum threads, and a fix list that starts at free. Most findings cost little or nothing to fix — the $395 is for knowing which fixes your home actually needs, and the data that proves they worked.
Prepared September 2026 · Family of four, one on the way · SAMPLE
The short version: this is a healthy home with two fixable habits and one $0 change that will meaningfully improve the nursery. Nothing found requires a specialist. Full findings below.
| Room | PM2.5 µg/m³ | CO₂ peak ppm | RH % | Read |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parlor | 5 | 720 | 44 | GOOD |
| Kitchen (cooking test) | 142 → 38* | 880 | 46 | HABIT FIX |
| Primary bedroom | 6 | 940 | 42 | GOOD |
| Nursery (overnight) | 6 | 1,480 → 790* | 45 | $0 FIX |
| Garden‑level office | 7 | 810 | 58 | DEHUMIDIFY |
| Bath (post‑shower) | — | — | 71 → 49* | FAN WORKS |
* after the recommended change, measured same visit or overnight retest. Benchmarks: WHO 24‑h PM2.5 guideline 15 µg/m³; EPA annual standard 9; ~1,000 ppm CO₂ ventilation convention; 30–50% RH comfort‑and‑allergen band.
PM2.5, µg/m³, measured at the kitchen counter while pan‑searing. Your hood recirculates rather than venting out — running it still cuts the peak by ~73% when paired with a cracked window. Upgrade path in the fix list.
CO₂ in ppm from the overnight logger. The room itself is fine — it's simply sealed too well. A door ajar (or the transfer‑grille option in the fix list, if you prefer the door closed) keeps the whole night under the benchmark. Most homes need only the single overnight; when a finding warrants it, a retest night is included — the logger stays one more day and pickup simply shifts.
| Sample | Lead, ppb | Copper, ppm | Read |
|---|---|---|---|
| First draw (sat overnight) | 3.1 | 0.31 | LOW |
| After 60‑second flush | 0.9 | 0.09 | LOW |
Context, plainly: no amount of lead is considered “safe,” so lower is always better — NYC schools act at 5 ppb, and the federal action levels are 10 ppb for lead and 1.3 ppm for copper. Your first‑draw/flush gap points to a small fixture contribution, not the service line — and the city’s service‑line map lists this building as non‑lead, consistent with the flush number. Recommendation: the free habit (run the tap ~30 seconds after long sits, especially for formula water), and an NSF‑53 certified filter if you want the number nearer zero. Full protocol: the water panel.
Free, this week
Under $150
Worth pricing
This is a screening with professional‑grade instruments — not specialist environmental testing. Asbestos, lead paint, radon, and similar licensed domains are outside its scope; nothing observed in this home suggested a specialist was needed, and if it had, that referral would be written here, plainly. VOC lab speciation is likewise out of scope; guidance on sources and ventilation appears in the appendix. Instruments, benchmarks, and methods: brownstoneair.com/method.
$395 · payment after your audit · eight homes only