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Best Asbestos Removal Contractor License Check in Kansas City, MO

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66 contractors in Kansas City

All Asbestos Removal Contractor License Check Contractors66

Advanced Environmental Services, Inc.

3100 Gravois Ave , Saint Louis, MO 63118-2128

8 yrs in business

— Closed

Asbestos Removal, Mold Removal, Demolition Contractors. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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TALLGRASS HOME INSPECTIONS LLC

3514 Clinton Pkwy., Suite A-3300 , Lawrence, KS 66047-2145

10 yrs in business

— Closed

Home Inspections, Asbestos Testing, Radon Testing.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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AC Enviromental Inc

Granite City, IL 62040-3608

10 yrs in business

— Closed

Asbestos Removal, Mold Removal, Mold Remediation. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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St. John Environmental Consulting

5515 Grace Ave , Saint Louis, MO 63116-4111

17 yrs in business

— Closed

Asbestos Testing, Radon Testing, Mold Inspection. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Earth's Solution Environmental

795 , Bridgeton, MO 63044-0795

17 yrs in business

— Closed

Asbestos Removal, Demolition Contractors, Asbestos Testing. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Universal Abatement ,inc

8224 Manchester Rd # 105 , Saint Louis, MO 63144

5 yrs in business

— Closed

Lead Abatement, Asbestos Removal, Radon Mitigation. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Crossroads Construction Services, Inc.

1736 Flint Hill Park Ln , Wentzville, MO 63385-2100

9 yrs in business

— Closed

Asbestos Removal, Mold Removal, Demolition Contractors. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Precision Analysis Inc

952 Anglum Rd , Hazelwood, MO 63042-2329

7 yrs in business

— Closed

Ecological Services, Mold Removal, Asbestos Removal. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Venturi Restoration

13586 Northwest Industrial, Suite D , Bridgeton, MO 63044

7 yrs in business

— Closed

Disaster Cleanup, General Contractor, Building Contractors.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Guaranteed Property Solutions LLC

214 E Birch St , Carbondale, IL 62901-1519

8 yrs in business

— Closed

Mold Removal, Drywall Contractors, Pressure Washing. BBB Rating A+.

Serves: 64101, 64102, 64105, 64106 +45 more

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Asbestos Removal Cost Guide — Kansas City, MO

What Kansas City Homeowners Pay for Asbestos Removal in 2025

Asbestos is present in a substantial portion of Kansas City's housing stock. Any home built before 1980 potentially contains asbestos-containing materials (ACM) — and homes built between 1940 and 1980 are especially likely to have multiple ACM locations. Kansas City's large inventory of mid-century bungalows, ranch homes, and Craftsman-era housing in neighborhoods like Waldo, Brookside, Westport-adjacent areas, Midtown, and Northeast KC means that asbestos abatement is a recurring necessity for any renovation, HVAC upgrade, or major repair project in these homes.

The fundamental rule: Asbestos that is in good condition and will not be disturbed does not need to be removed. Asbestos that is damaged, friable (crumbling), or will be disturbed by renovation work must be abated by a licensed professional. Attempting DIY asbestos removal in Missouri is illegal for most ACM types.


Common Asbestos-Containing Materials in Kansas City Homes (Pre-1980)

MaterialWhere FoundCondition/Risk
Pipe and duct insulation (amosite, chrysotile)Basement, HVAC ductworkHigh risk if damaged; must be abated before HVAC replacement
Floor tiles (9×9 inch, chrysotile-bonded)Basement, kitchen, laundryLow risk if intact; must be abated if cutting, grinding, or removal planned
Floor tile adhesive (cutback)Under 9×9 floor tile, linoleumEncapsulation often acceptable; abatement required if tile is removed
Popcorn ceiling texture (pre-1977)Living rooms, bedroomsTest before any scraping or repair; high airborne risk if disturbed
Drywall joint compound (pre-1977)Anywhere drywall existsLow risk if undamaged; sanding creates dangerous exposure
Attic insulation (vermiculite, some pre-1972)Attic insulation layerVermiculite from Libby, MT is known to contain tremolite asbestos; test before any disturbance
Roof shingles (asbestos-cement)RoofRelatively low risk if intact; abatement required for replacement
Siding (transite, asbestos-cement)Exterior of 1940s–1960s ranch homesMust be abated before certain repair or replacement work
Boiler/furnace wrapOlder homes with original boiler systemsHigh risk if deteriorating; often requires full abatement before boiler replacement

Kansas City Asbestos Removal Cost Ranges (2025)

ScopeTypical KC Price
Testing only (bulk sampling, certified lab)$250–$500 for 5–10 samples
Pipe insulation removal (20–50 lf)$1,500–$4,000
Popcorn ceiling removal (1,000–1,500 sf room)$1,500–$3,000
Floor tile removal (200–400 sf)$2,000–$4,500
Duct wrap insulation removal (HVAC system)$2,000–$6,000 depending on system complexity
Attic insulation (vermiculite)$3,000–$8,000 per standard attic
Partial basement abatement (multiple materials)$3,000–$8,000
Full home pre-renovation survey + multi-material abatement$8,000–$25,000+

What drives price:

  • Total volume of material to remove
  • Whether material is friable (crumbling) vs. non-friable — friable requires more rigorous containment
  • Disposal transportation distance to nearest licensed hazardous waste landfill
  • Confined or tight-access spaces (crawl space, small attic)
  • Missouri and EPA Air Toxics Hot Spot compliance documentation requirements

Missouri Licensing Requirements

Missouri requires asbestos abatement contractors to be licensed by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) Air Quality Program. The MDNR issues:

  • Asbestos Abatement Contractor License — the company
  • Asbestos Abatement Supervisor License — the on-site supervisor
  • Asbestos Abatement Worker License — each crew member

All three license types must be active and verifiable. Verify any contractor's license at the MDNR website or by calling the Air Quality Program at (573) 751-4817.

Additionally, EPA NESHAP (National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants) regulations require notification to MDNR before beginning abatement on commercial and public buildings. For residential single-family homes, NESHAP notification requirements are limited but still apply to large-scale projects (e.g., whole-home demolition).


When Encapsulation is an Alternative to Removal

Not all asbestos must be removed. Encapsulation — sealing or covering ACM so it cannot release fibers — is an EPA-recognized alternative for non-friable materials in good condition:

  • 9×9 floor tiles in good condition: installing new flooring directly over (without grinding) is a common encapsulation approach
  • Exterior transite siding in good condition: painting over to seal is acceptable in many situations
  • Pipe insulation: wrapping with encapsulant spray and protective jacket covers intact sections

Encapsulation is significantly cheaper than removal, but it does not eliminate the ACM — future contractors, buyers, and the home recordrequire disclosure that ACM remains. If you anticipate major renovation or sale within 5–10 years, removal is often the financially superior long-term choice.

Asbestos Removal FAQs — Kansas City, MO

Why Hire a Licensed Asbestos Abatement Contractor in Kansas City, MO

The Case for Licensed Asbestos Abatement in Kansas City

Asbestos abatement is one of the few home improvement categories where DIY is not just inadvisable — it is illegal under Missouri law for most material types, and illegal under federal NESHAP regulations for others. The consequences of disturbing asbestos-containing materials without proper containment are severe: mesothelioma (a universally fatal cancer associated with asbestos exposure) has a latency period of 20–50 years, meaning exposures today cause deaths two generations from now. This is not a category where cost-cutting through unlicensed work is rational.


Missouri Licensing — The Legal Framework

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources Air Quality Program administers Missouri's asbestos abatement licensing program under the authority of Missouri Revised Statutes §643.225. Three separate license types are required:

License TypeWho Must Hold ItVerify At
Asbestos Abatement Contractor LicenseThe company performing the workMDNR Air Quality Program: (573) 751-4817 or dnr.mo.gov/air/asbestos.htm
Asbestos Abatement Supervisor LicenseThe on-site supervisor present during all abatement workSame MDNR source
Asbestos Abatement Worker LicenseEvery crew member performing hands-on abatementSame MDNR source

Unlicensed asbestos removal in Missouri:

  • Is a violation of RSMo §643 and EPA NESHAP regulations
  • Carries civil penalties up to $25,000 per day per violation under federal CAA
  • Creates personal criminal liability for contractors and property owners who knowingly engage in prohibited removal
  • Does not protect occupants — improper removal without HEPA filtration and negative air pressure creates airborne asbestos fiber contamination that persists for years in the structure

What a Licensed Abatement Contractor Provides That No One Else Can

EPA HEPA-filtered respiratory protection: All MDNR-licensed abatement workers wear full-face respirators with HEPA filters or supplied-air respirators. Consumer-grade dust masks do not filter asbestos fibers.

Negative air pressure containment: The work area is sealed with 6-mil polyethylene sheeting, and a HEPA-filtered negative air machine maintains lower pressure inside the containment than outside — ensuring asbestos fibers cannot migrate to unaffected areas of the home during removal.

Wet methods: Asbestos materials are wetted with amended water before removal — wetness prevents fiber release. Dry removal is prohibited.

HEPA vacuums: All cleanup is performed with HEPA-filtered vacuum equipment only. Standard shop vacs or home vacuums blow asbestos fibers back into the air.

Licensed disposal: Asbestos waste must be double-bagged in 6-mil polyethylene, labeled per 40 CFR Part 61, and transported to a licensed asbestos-accepting landfill. In the Kansas City area, this typically means transport to Heartland Landfill (Wichita, KS) or another licensed facility — a cost included in your quote.

Air clearance testing: After abatement, most licensed contractors provide air clearance testing by a third-party industrial hygienist to confirm fiber levels are below OSHA's clearance standard (0.01 fibers per cubic centimeter).


Common Kansas City Asbestos Scenarios and What They Require

HVAC upgrade in a pre-1978 home: If the existing ductwork has asbestos insulation wrap, the HVAC contractor cannot remove it — they must stop, and a licensed abatement contractor must remove the duct insulation before HVAC work can continue. Budget $2,000–$6,000 for this step before your HVAC costs.

Renovation in a Waldo, Brookside, or Midtown bungalow: These homes frequently have all of the following: 9×9 floor tiles (chrysotile bonded), popcorn textured ceilings (pre-1977), pipe insulation (amosite wrapped around steam radiator pipes), and drywall compound containing chrysotile. A pre-renovation comprehensive survey ($250–$500) by a licensed industrial hygienist identifies all ACM before any contractor demo begins.

Roof replacement on a 1950s–1960s ranch home: Asbestos-cement shingle roofing was common in this era. Before re-roofing, test the existing shingles. If positive, an abatement contractor must remove the shingles in intact pieces (not broken — breaking releases fibers) before the roofing crew can proceed.


Questions to Ask Every Kansas City Asbestos Contractor

  1. Are your company, supervisor, and all workers licensed with Missouri DNR Air Quality Program?
  2. Will you provide documentation of your MDNR license numbers before work begins?
  3. Who performs air clearance testing after abatement — is it your company or an independent industrial hygienist?
  4. Which licensed landfill will receive the asbestos waste, and can you provide the disposal manifest?
  5. What containment method are you using — barrier poly, negative air, wet methods — for our specific material type?
  6. Is encapsulation appropriate for our specific materials, and if so, what does that mean for future renovation disclosure?

DIY vs. Professional Asbestos Abatement — Kansas City, MO

DIY vs. Professional Asbestos Removal in Kansas City: There Is No Real Contest

Asbestos removal is the rare home improvement category where the comparison between DIY and professional work is essentially theoretical. Missouri law, federal OSHA regulations, and EPA NESHAP rules collectively eliminate DIY as a legal option for most asbestos scenarios. This comparison exists to clarify exactly which very narrow scenarios a homeowner can legally handle, and which require a licensed Missouri DNR abatement contractor.


Side-by-Side Comparison

FactorDIYLicensed Professional
Legal for residential homeowner in MOOnly for intact, non-friable ACM on owner-occupied property where owner performs work personallyAll scenarios — required for all commercial, multi-family, and most residential abatement
Cost$0 labor + $50–$200 disposal fees + equipment$1,500–$25,000 depending on scope
Respiratory protection requiredFull-face HEPA respirator (P100) minimum; OSHA recommends supplied-airFull-face HEPA or supplied-air (required under Missouri licensing)
ContainmentNear-impossible without professional equipment6-mil poly barrier + negative air machine + HEPA filtration — standard
Fiber release riskExtremely high — containment errors, dry removal, improper baggingMinimal — wet methods, HEPA vacuums, sealed containment standard
Legal disposalSame licensed landfill requirement applies — double-bagged 6-mil poly, labeled per 40 CFR Part 61Properly documented, manifested disposal at licensed facility
Air clearance after workCannot self-certify — independent IH test still requiredLicensed contractor coordinates; third-party IH air clearance standard
Insurance coverage if error occursHomeowner's policy typically excludes self-asbestos-removal incidentsContractor's GL covers abatement-related claims
Real estate disclosureACM remains disclosed; future contractors cannot touch without abatementCertificate of abatement documents removal; full clearance for renovation
Kansas City-specific riskPre-1978 homes averaging 3–6 ACM locations — removing one without surveying all creates cross-contamination riskFull survey + sequenced abatement plan includes all ACM

What Missouri Homeowners Can Legally Do Themselves

The EPA and Missouri DNR provide limited exceptions for homeowners performing work on their own single-family, owner-occupied residence:

  • Remove intact, non-friable floor tiles (9×9 VAT) without breaking them — but this requires proper disposal
  • Apply encapsulant paint to intact asbestos-cement siding or intact pipe insulation
  • Leave intact, non-friable ACM in place when not disturbing it

What these exceptions do NOT allow:

  • Sanding, grinding, sawing, or mechanically disturbing any ACM
  • Removing popcorn ceiling texture (high fiber release)
  • Removing pipe insulation (friable; highest fiber count)
  • Any abatement on rental properties or multi-family units
  • Any abatement before demolition or whole-room renovation

The Encapsulation vs. Removal Decision for Kansas City Pre-1978 Homes

Kansas City homeowners often face this choice after receiving a positive asbestos test. A licensed industrial hygienist (not just an abatement contractor) can provide a recommendation based on:

Choose ENCAPSULATION when:

  • Floor tiles are in excellent condition, no cracking, no lifting edges
  • Exterior transite siding is intact and not crumbling
  • The ACM will not be disturbed by any planned renovation
  • Remaining in the home long-term (no near-term sale) — disclosure still required

Choose REMOVAL when:

  • Planning any renovation that will disturb the ACM (flooring replacement, HVAC upgrade, roofing)
  • Planning to sell within 5 years — buyers and inspectors routinely flag known ACM
  • ACM is showing deterioration (crumbling pipe insulation, cracked floor tiles)
  • Property is a rental — encapsulation liability risk with tenants

Kansas City-Specific Risk: The HVAC Upgrade Trigger

Kansas City's aging housing stock means that the #1 trigger for emergency asbestos abatement is HVAC replacement. Virtually every pre-1960 home with an original forced-air or steam heating system has asbestos ductwork wrap or boiler insulation. When an HVAC contractor arrives to replace a furnace or duct system and discovers asbestos insulation, they are legally required to stop work. The homeowner then faces:

  1. Emergency abatement quote ($2,000–$6,000 typical for ductwork scope)
  2. Delay of 3–7 business days for licensed contractor scheduling
  3. Revised HVAC project scope and price

The solution: Have a licensed industrial hygienist survey your home before scheduling any HVAC replacement in a pre-1978 Kansas City home. A $300–$500 survey eliminates surprise delays and costs.


Bottom Line

For Kansas City homeowners in pre-1978 properties: testing before any renovation is the financially correct decision. A $300–$500 survey is roughly 1–3% of the cost of a major renovation, and discovering asbestos mid-project costs 3–5× more than planned abatement due to emergency scheduling, project delay, and contractor downtime billing.

Encapsulation is appropriate for intact materials not being disturbed. Removal is required for renovation scenarios, sale situations, or any deteriorating ACM. DIY removal is a legal and health risk that is not worth attempting.

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