Recognition & Standards
EezyAir's home air quality self-assessment is built on the same EPA and ASHRAE guidelines that professional indoor air quality consultants use. Over 6,000 homeowners and renters have used it to understand and improve the air inside their homes.
Built on EPA and ASHRAE Guidelines
EezyAir's self-assessment evaluates the factors that matter most for residential indoor air quality. Our question framework and scoring model draw from guidance published by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). These are the same standards that professional indoor air quality consultants reference when conducting in-home evaluations.
The assessment covers key indicators including ventilation adequacy, moisture and humidity conditions, potential VOC sources, particulate matter contributors, and radon awareness. Each factor is weighted based on its documented impact on respiratory health, cognitive function, and long-term wellbeing.
EPA Indoor Air Quality Guidelines
Our assessment framework references EPA guidance on residential air pollutant sources, ventilation recommendations, and the agency's established thresholds for common indoor contaminants. The EPA has documented that indoor pollutant concentrations can be two to five times higher than outdoor levels.
ASHRAE Standard 62.2
Ventilation-related questions in our assessment align with ASHRAE 62.2, the national consensus standard for ventilation and acceptable indoor air quality in residential buildings. This standard defines minimum ventilation rates and system requirements for single-family and multifamily dwellings.
EPA Guidance on VOCs and Radon
Our screening questions for volatile organic compounds and radon risk reference EPA published guidance on residential exposure sources. The EPA identifies common household products, building materials, and geographic radon zones as primary contributors to indoor air quality issues that homeowners can assess and address through targeted changes.
What Families Are Saying
These are the kinds of results homeowners and renters report after completing the EezyAir assessment. Each person started with a question about their home's air and walked away with a specific answer and a plan.
What Makes This Different
Professional indoor air quality testing typically costs $300 to $500 or more per visit. EezyAir's self-assessment requires no equipment and delivers results immediately. We built it this way because indoor air quality awareness should not have a price barrier. Families should be able to understand their home environment before deciding whether professional services are needed.
We do not sell HVAC equipment. We do not run a lead generation service for contractors. EezyAir exists to give you an honest, education-first starting point for understanding your home's air quality. If the assessment identifies areas of concern, we explain what they mean and point you toward credible next steps, whether that is a simple DIY fix or a conversation with a qualified professional.
Health Education Partners
EezyAir partners with creators and educators who share our focus on making family health accessible. These collaborations produce original content that meets families where they already are.
"How (Not) to Go Viral" with Grow With Kid Songs
A children's song collaboration about everyday health habits: breathing fresh air, handwashing, hydration, and staying active. Part of the @growwithkidsongs catalog of CASEL-aligned music for ages 2 to 12. Listen on YouTube
Find out where your home stands in less than 16 minutes. No equipment needed, no strings.
Start Your Free Assessment