Contaminant guide

PFAS in Drinking Water

PFAS are a group of man-made chemicals that can show up in water data. Public reporting is improving, but local results and address-specific conditions require careful interpretation.

What PFAS are

PFAS are a large group of synthetic chemicals used in many industrial and consumer applications. They are often discussed in drinking-water conversations because some PFAS can persist in the environment and may be monitored in public water systems.

Important: location-specific content should not claim a specific location has or does not have PFAS unless that claim is supported by local report data, monitoring data, or a cited dataset.

How PFAS can enter water

PFAS may be associated with industrial sites, firefighting foams, landfills, wastewater, and other sources. Whether they appear in a specific water system depends on local source water, monitoring, treatment, and reporting.

What public reports can show

Public water reports and monitoring data may show PFAS results where testing has occurred. However, data availability varies by location, reporting period, system size, and changing regulatory requirements.

When testing may make sense

Consider testing if you rely on a private well, live near a known PFAS source, have a specific local concern, or want address-specific information beyond a public water report. Use a qualified lab if you need reliable PFAS results.

Treatment considerations

Some filters and reverse-osmosis systems are certified for PFAS reduction, but certification, installation, and maintenance matter. A water softener is not a PFAS treatment system.

Sources and limitations

  • EPA PFAS drinking water information and regulatory updates.
  • Public water system reports where location-specific PFAS data is available.
  • Certified testing and treatment guidance should be used for address-specific decisions.

This guide is educational. It does not diagnose water quality at any specific address and does not replace advice from a utility, health department, certified lab, or water-treatment professional.