☢ Current National Milk Radiation Index — Real-Time Data Feed
SAFE ELEV. HIGH
0.047
mSv per 8 oz. glass  |  30-second national average
✓ SAFE LEVELS DETECTED

Refreshing in 30s  ·  Safe threshold: ≤ 0.100 mSv/glass (MilkOrg Standard*)
* MilkOrg Standard is its own standard. See footer disclaimer. Not affiliated with WHO, FDA, NRC, or the dairy industry.
🔍 Check Your Local Milk Safety — ZIP Code Lookup

Enter your ZIP code to retrieve readings from the nearest active sensor in your dairy region. Our 1,847 sensors cover approximately 94% of U.S. milk-producing areas. The remaining 6% includes Vermont, most of Florida, and one county in Nebraska we cannot obtain permits for.

📊 State-by-State Radiation Readings — Continuously Updated
StatemSv / 8ozStatusTrendSensor Notes
* Ohio readings sourced from a secondary sensor located inside a Wegmans dairy aisle. Elevation may reflect ambient refrigeration, or may not.  ·  Vermont sensor "coming soon" since Q4 2012.  ·  → Full 50-state report
📈 12-Month National Rolling Average — Radiation Trend

The above chart demonstrates that national milk radiation remains comfortably within safe limits. The consistent upward trend is entirely normal and should not concern you at this time.

🔬 Our Methodology — How We Monitor

MilkOrg.net operates the Distributed Isotope Milk Analysis System (DIMAS™) — a nationwide network of over 2,000 sensors deployed across 47 states. Each sensor uses a modified Geiger-Müller tube calibrated to detect Cesium-134, Cesium-137, Iodine-131, Strontium-90, and trace amounts of Uranium-milk — an isotope variant first identified by our team in 2012 and not yet recognized by the broader scientific community, likely because they haven't looked hard enough.

Sensor data is transmitted every 30 seconds via satellite uplink to our secure data center (hosted on GoDaddy shared hosting, Business Plan). All readings are processed through MilkSafe™ Algorithm v3.1 and cross-referenced against thresholds defined by the International Dairy Radiation Standards Consortium (IDRSC) — whose guidelines are similar to, but legally distinct from, any actual regulatory standard.

We are committed to full scientific transparency. Raw datasets are available upon request by mailing a self-addressed stamped envelope to our P.O. box. Please allow 6–8 weeks. Some datasets may no longer exist.

💬 What the Public Is Saying
"Every morning, before I let my kids anywhere near the cereal, I check MilkOrg. When I saw Ohio go elevated, I switched the whole family to oat milk immediately. My kids hate it. But I feel much better about things."
— Sandra K., Columbus, OH
"I have not consumed dairy since March 2011 and I feel fantastic. My physician says my bones are 'below average density for my age,' but that seems like a reasonable trade-off."
— Bob T., Boise, ID
"MilkOrg helped me realize that 2% milk is 2% more radiation than whole milk. Do the math. It's right there."
— DairyTruth99, Forum Post #4,821 [Moderator note: this is not how percentages work]
"The ZIP checker said my area was ELEVATED. I moved. New house is great. Highly recommend."
— Anonymous, Formerly of Scranton, PA
👨‍🔬 Scientific Advisory Board
👨‍🔬
Dr. James Neutron, Ph.D.
Former Assistant Deputy Associate Director of Dairy Radiological Sciences (Retired, 2009)
14 peer-reviewed publications (submitted)  ·  3 peer-reviewed publications (under review since 2013)
👩‍🔬
Carl Radiation, M.S.
M.S. Radiation Sciences, University of Phoenix Online (Dean's List, Spring 2010)
Certified Nuclear Awareness Advocate (self-certified, 2011)  ·  Avid blogger
🧑‍🔬
Dr. Patricia Half-Life, Ph.D., M.D., D.D.S.
Radiological Dairy Consultant  ·  MilkOrg Co-Founder  ·  Available for speaking engagements
"We take milk very seriously." — Dr. Half-Life, MilkOrg Newsletter Vol. 3 (2012)