2026 Rankings

Highest Remediation Burden: District of Columbia — 2026

Last updated: June 4, 2026

22 ZIP codes ranked by Remediation Burden #1: ZIP 20006 (Washington, DC) — $2,300

Out of 22 ZIP codes with data in District of Columbia, these are the areas where estimated safety remediation costs represent the largest share of median home value. See also: National Rankings | All District of Columbia Rankings

Statistic Value
ZIP codes ranked 22
Highest burden 0.9% of median home value
Median burden 0.3% of median home value
Median estimated cost $2,300
State District of Columbia

Top 22 Highest Remediation Burden ZIP Codes

Rank ZIP Code City State Est. Cost Median Home Value Burden %
1 20006 Washington DC $2,300 $255,700 0.9%
2 20024 Washington DC $3,600 $497,100 0.7%
3 20032 Washington DC $2,300 $391,400 0.6%
4 20019 Washington DC $2,300 $437,600 0.5%
5 20020 Washington DC $2,300 $442,500 0.5%
6 20036 Washington DC $2,300 $442,400 0.5%
7 20004 Washington DC $2,900 $650,700 0.4%
8 20002 Washington DC $2,900 $813,700 0.4%
9 20005 Washington DC $2,300 $636,000 0.4%
10 20017 Washington DC $2,300 $686,400 0.3%
11 20018 Washington DC $2,300 $672,100 0.3%
12 20009 Washington DC $2,300 $727,800 0.3%
13 20011 Washington DC $2,300 $722,200 0.3%
14 20037 Washington DC $2,300 $743,700 0.3%
15 20001 Washington DC $2,300 $844,500 0.3%
16 20012 Washington DC $2,300 $838,200 0.3%
17 20008 Washington DC $2,300 $894,100 0.3%
18 20010 Washington DC $2,300 $868,400 0.3%
19 20003 Washington DC $2,300 $954,200 0.2%
20 20007 Washington DC $2,900 $1,202,900 0.2%
21 20015 Washington DC $2,300 $1,208,700 0.2%
22 20016 Washington DC $2,300 $1,206,200 0.2%

Methodology

The remediation burden ratio is calculated as: estimated remediation cost / median home value. Remediation costs are the sum of applicable safety measures for each ZIP code based on EPA, FEMA, and state data:

  • Lead service line replacement — where lead exposure risk is elevated (based on housing age, water system data, and EPA sampling)
  • Radon mitigation system — in EPA Zone 1 and Zone 2 areas with predicted indoor radon above 4 pCi/L
  • Whole-home water filtration — where contaminant levels exceed EPA guidelines
  • Flood insurance — in FEMA-designated flood zones with claim history
  • PFAS treatment — where PFAS detections have been reported

Median home values are from U.S. Census American Community Survey (ACS) estimates. Cost estimates use national average ranges from EPA, HUD, and industry data. Individual home costs may vary significantly based on specific conditions.

Last updated: 2026-06-04.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "remediation cost relative to home value" mean?

This ratio compares the estimated cost of addressing safety issues (lead pipes, radon mitigation, water filtration, flood insurance) to the median home value in that ZIP code. A ratio of 10% means remediation could cost roughly one-tenth of a typical home's value — a significant financial burden.

How are remediation costs estimated?

Costs are based on national averages for common remediation projects: lead service line replacement ($4,700-$12,000), radon mitigation ($800-$2,500), whole-home water filtration ($1,500-$4,000), and flood insurance premiums. Only issues flagged by EPA, FEMA, or state data for each ZIP code are included.

Why does this matter for homebuyers?

In areas with high remediation burden, the cost of making a home safe can represent a large portion of the home's value. This is especially impactful in lower-value housing markets where a $15,000 remediation bill represents 10-30% of the home price. Standard home inspections may not identify all these issues.

Does a high ratio mean the home is unsafe?

Not necessarily. The ratio reflects potential costs based on area-level environmental data — not every home in the ZIP code will need all remediation work. However, it indicates elevated risk factors that buyers should investigate before purchasing.

Explore More Rankings

How this ranking is calculated, data sources, and limitations: Rankings Methodology →


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Disclaimer: Rankings are based on EPA, FEMA, and federal agency data. They reflect historical patterns and risk indicators, not necessarily current conditions. For the most current information, contact your local water utility or request a Consumer Confidence Report.

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