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Regional Screening Levels (RSLs) - Generic Tables

Tables as of:  

Regional Screening Levels (RSLs)
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For assistance/questions please use the Regional Screening Levels (RSLs) contact us page.

The screening level (SL) tables are available for download in Excel and PDF formats. All tables are presented with target cancer risk (TR) of 1E-06, however, tables are presented with target hazard quotients (THQ) of 1.0 and 0.1. Use the tables appropriate for your region. These tables are considered ready for use. The tables contain both SL calculations and the toxicity values that were used. The download tables do not include the ingestion of fish exposure pathway, the outdoor worker and the indoor worker exposure to soil exposure pathway that are presented in the User's Guide. These exposure pathways can be considered on a site-specific basis in the Calculator.

  • If you wish to receive notifications when RSLs are updated, use the Signup Form to learn more.
  • For RSL questions please use the RSL Contact Us page.
  • For general risk assessment questions, separate from the RSLs, please use the General Risk Assessment Contact page.
  • Users with Adobe Acrobat Pro have reported that some pages of the PDFs are not displaying correctly in Chrome. This issue can be resolved by downloading the PDF instead.
Screening Levels(TR=1E-06
THQ=1.0)
(TR=1E-06
THQ=1.0)
(TR=1E-06
THQ=0.1)
(TR=1E-06
THQ=0.1)
Summary TableLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Resident SoilLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Composite Worker SoilLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Resident AirLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Composite Worker AirLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Resident Tap WaterLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Resident Soil to GroundwaterLoading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Composite Table (Every Table)Loading...Loading...Loading...Loading...
Other TablesPDFXLS
Chemical Specific ParametersLoading...Loading...
Subchronic Toxicity ValuesLoading...Loading...
Default Exposure Parameters and DefinitionsPDFXLS
Descriptions of annotations and abbreviations used in RSL tables and calculator output
Annotation/AbbreviationDefinitionLinks to detailed discussion
Toxicity Related
CASChemical Abstracts Services Registry NumberCAS is a unique numerical identifier assigned to every chemical substance described in the open scientific literature, including organic and inorganic compounds.
SF, SFO, CSFoOral Slope Factor (mg/kg-day)-1See section 2.3.3 of the user's guide.
IURInhalation Unit Risk (µg/m3)-1See section 2.3.4 of the user's guide.
RfD or RfDoChronic Oral Reference Dose (mg/kg-day)See section 2.3.1 of the user's guide.
RfCChronic Inhalation Reference Concentration (mg/m3)See section 2.3.2 of the user's guide.
I or IRISEPA's Integrated Risk Information SystemSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the IRIS website.
P or PPRTVThe Provisional Peer Reviewed Toxicity ValuesSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the PPRTV website.
D or OWEPA Office of Water Drinking Water Health Advisories and Human Health Toxicity AssessmentsSee section 2.5 of the user's guide and the OW website.
O or OPPEPA's Office of Pesticide Programs Human Health Benchmarks for PesticidesSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the Human Health Benchmarks for Pesticides website.
A or ATSDR FinalThe Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry minimal risk levels (MRLs) (Final)See section 2.3 of the user's guide and the ATSDR website.
T or ATSDR DraftThe Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry minimal risk levels (MRLs) (Draft)See section 2.3 of the user's guide and the ATSDR website.
C or Cal EPAThe California Environmental Protection Agency Office of Environmental Health Hazard AssessmentSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the Cal EPA OEHHA website.
X or SCREENScreening toxicity values in an appendix to certain PPRTV assessmentsSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the PPRTV website.
HThe EPA Superfund program's Health Effects Assessment Summary TableSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the  HEAST website.
R or ORDThe EPA Office of Research and DevelopmentSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the  ORD website.
N or WIThe State of WisconsinSee section 2.3 of the user's guide and the WI  DHS website.
WToxicity Equivalence Factors (TEF) appliedSee section 2.3.5 of the user's guide for description of TEFs for dioxins
ERelative Potency Factors (RPFs) appliedSee section 2.3.6 of the user's guide for description of RPFs for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
G

See user's guide section 5

See section 5 of the user's guide for special considerations.
VVolatileVolatiles, for the purpose of the RSLs, are chemicals with a Henry's Law constant greater than 1 x 10-5 atm-m3/mole or a vapor pressure greater than 1 mm Hg. See section 4.9.4 of the user's guide.
MMutagenSee section 5.17 of the user's guide. Some of the cancer causing analytes in this tool operate by a mutagenic mode of action for carcinogenesis. Special equations are used.
GIABSFraction of contaminant absorbed in gastrointestinal tract (unitless)See Exhibit 4-1 of the soil screening guidance. Note: if the GIABS is >50% then it is set to 100% for the calculation of dermal toxicity values.
ABS or ABSdFraction of contaminant absorbed dermally from soil (unitless)See Exhibit 3-4 of the soil screening guidance
CsatSoil saturation concentration (mg/kg)See section 5.12 of the user's guide. The soil saturation concentration, Csat, corresponds to the contaminant concentration in soil at which the absorptive limits of the soil particles, the solubility limits of the soil pore water, and saturation of soil pore air have been reached.
RBARelative bioavailability factorSee section 5.10 of the user's guide. Arsenic screening levels for ingestion of soil are now calculated with the default relative bioavailability factor (RBA) of 0.6.
RSL Related
SLScreening LevelSee section 1 of the user's guide and FAQ 1.
TRTarget RiskSee section 5.14 of the user's guide.
THQTarget Hazard QuotientSee section 5.14 of the user's guide and FAQ 6.
THITarget Hazard IndexSee section 5.14 of the user's guide.  and FAQ 6.
SSLSoil Screening LevelSee section 4.8 of the user's guide.
c or caCancer is driving screening levelSee section 5.14 of the user's guide. Cancer and noncancer screening levels are presented in the supporting tables. The most protective value is chosen for the summary table.
n or ncNoncancer is driving screening levelSee section 5.14 of the user's guide   Cancer and noncancer screening levels are presented in the supporting tables. The most protective value is chosen for the summary table.
*The noncancer screening level is less than 100 times the cancer screening levelSee section 5.14 of the user's guide.  Some users of this SL Table may plan to multiply the cancer SL concentrations by 100 to set 'action levels' for triggering remediation or to set less stringent cleanup levels for a specific site after considering non-risk-based factors such as ambient levels, detection limits, or technological feasibility. 
**The noncancer screening level is less than 10 times the cancer screening levelSee section 5.14 of the user's guide. Some users of this SL Table may plan to multiply the cancer SL concentrations by 10 to set 'action levels' for triggering remediation or to set less stringent cleanup levels for a specific site after considering non-risk-based factors such as ambient levels, detection limits, or technological feasibility. 
m or maxThe screening level has exceeded the theoretical maximum concentration.See section 5.13 of the user's guide. The ceiling limit of 10+5 mg/kg is equivalent to a chemical representing 10% by weight of the soil sample. At this contaminant concentration (and higher), the assumptions for soil contact may be violated (for example, soil adherence and wind-borne dispersion assumptions) due to the presence of the foreign substance itself.
s or satThe screening level has exceeded the  theoretical absorption limit of the soil.See section 5.12 of the user's guide.  The soil saturation concentration, Csat, corresponds to the contaminant concentration in soil at which the absorptive limits of the soil particles, the solubility limits of the soil pore water, and saturation of soil pore air have been reached. Above this concentration, the soil contaminant may be present in free phase (i.e., nonaqueous phase liquids (NAPLs) for contaminants that are liquid at ambient soil temperatures and pure solid phases for compounds that are solid at ambient soil temperatures). 
DAFDilution attenuation factorSee section 4.8.5 of the user's guide.
UUser-providedIn user-provided mode all the input values are given a reference of U.
Toxicity Related
ppmparts per millionppm is the number of units of mass of a contaminant per million units of total mass.
ppbparts per billionppb is the number of units of mass of a contaminant per billion units of total mass.
kgkilogram1,000 grams
mgmilligram1,000th of a gram
µgmicrogram1,000,000th of a gram
m3cubic metersA volume that is made by a cube that is 1 meter on each side.

For assistance/questions please use the Regional Screening Levels (RSLs) contact us page. For general risk assessment questions, separate from the RSLs, please use the link below.

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Last updated on June 26, 2025
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