For Homeowners

Your home tested positive for meth. Now what?

ClearHome teaches you how to legally decontaminate your property yourself. State-specific courses, step-by-step guides, and everything you need to pass clearance testing, without paying $15,000+ for a professional crew.

$15k+ Average professional decontamination cost
50 States with different contamination standards
0 Resources built for homeowners doing it themselves
The Problem

You bought a house. It used to be a meth house. Welcome to a nightmare nobody prepared you for.

Sticker shock

Professional decontamination companies quote $5,000 to $25,000+. For many homeowners, that's not in the budget. The alternative? Scattered blog posts, conflicting advice, and no clear path forward.

State-by-state confusion

Utah requires 1.0 µg/100cm². Colorado says 0.5. Washington allows 1.5. Every state has different rules, different testing methods, and different disclosure requirements. Miss one detail and you fail clearance.

Nobody serves you

Every training course targets professionals. Every cleaning product is sold to contractors. Homeowners are left with two choices: pay a fortune or figure it out alone. Until now.

How ClearHome Works

From contaminated to cleared. We walk you through every step.

ClearHome gives you the education, tools, and confidence to decontaminate your property legally, safely, and at a fraction of the professional cost.

Step One

Learn Your State's Rules

Our state-specific guides break down contamination thresholds, testing requirements, disclosure laws, and whether you can legally do the work yourself. No legal jargon. Just clarity.

Step Two

Take the Course

Digital courses built for homeowners, not contractors. Learn proper PPE, surface testing, HVAC cleaning, chemical selection, and the exact process to meet your state's clearance standard.

Step Three

Get the Kit

Everything you need in one box. Testing swabs, approved cleaning solutions, protective equipment, and a step-by-step checklist matched to your state's requirements.

Step Four

Pass Clearance

Follow the process, document your work, and pass your state's clearance testing. Your home goes from condemned to clean, and you saved thousands doing it right.

State-by-State

Every state plays by different rules. We know all of them.

Contamination thresholds, testing protocols, homeowner rights, and disclosure laws vary wildly. ClearHome maps the entire landscape so you know exactly what applies to you.

Utah
1.0 µg/100cm²
Homeowner self-decon allowed. Rule 392-600 governs all standards.
Colorado
0.5 µg/100cm²
Strictest standard. Board of Health regulations apply.
Washington
1.5 µg/100cm²
More lenient threshold. State-specific testing methods.
Montana
Varies by county
DEQ certifies contractors. Contaminated property list maintained.

Your home is worth saving. The knowledge to save it should be accessible.

ClearHome exists because no homeowner should have to choose between an unaffordable professional bill and living in a contaminated house. Education changes the equation.