Water Quality Report · Updated May 12, 2026

Washington Municipal Water System

Serving 705,000 residents in Washington, District of Columbia .

National rank 62th percentile
District of Columbia rank 100th percentile
Data confidence High
Quick answer

Washington Municipal Water System delivers tap water graded C (66/100) by TapWaterSafety.org. The utility serves approximately 705,000 residents in Washington, District of Columbia using surface water from the Potomac River. The most significant water quality concerns are: Lead detected in source water; Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) significantly above health guideline; Chromium-6 detected. For questions, the utility can be reached at (202) 264-6660.

Data sources for this grade: utilities.csv ⓘ How did we get this rating?
Sample data notice: Some or all data on this page is illustrative sample data, not live measurements from this utility. See our disclaimer. For authoritative info, refer to the utility's published Consumer Confidence Report.
705,000
People served
1
City served
15
Contaminants detected
15
Above health guidelines
0
EPA violations (5 yr)
2024
Most recent test

Is Washington tap water safe to drink?

Washington Municipal Water System delivers tap water that earns a grade of C (66/100) from TapWaterSafety.org — an average rating, with several contaminants above health guidelines but generally compliant with US legal limits.

The utility serves 705,000 residents in Washington, drawing from surface water (Potomac River) and disinfecting with chloramine. Despite being legal under US EPA standards, this water would fail the European Union's Drinking Water Directive, primarily due to lead detected in source water.

Public testing data identifies 15 contaminants in this water above EWG's health-based guidelines, including: Haloacetic Acids (HAA5), Haloacetic Acids (HAA5), Haloacetic Acids (HAA5), Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs), Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs), Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs), Nitrate, Chromium-6 (Hexavalent), Chromium-6 (Hexavalent), Nitrate, Chromium-6 (Hexavalent), Nitrate, Lead, Lead, Lead. For most residents, a properly certified home filter at the kitchen tap is the most cost-effective way to reduce exposure to whatever's in your water. See our filter recommendations below, matched specifically to this utility's contaminant profile.

Top concerns in this water

Based on the most recent EPA and EWG data, these are the most significant water quality issues for Washington Municipal Water System.

Lead detected in source water

Severe concern

Lead detected at 4.4 ppb. EWG considers no level of lead safe; EPA's action level is 15 ppb.

Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) significantly above health guideline

Moderate concern

Haloacetic Acids (HAA5) detected at 25.0 ppb, 250x above the EWG health guideline of 0.1 ppb.

Chromium-6 detected

Moderate concern

Chromium-6 detected at 0.15 ppb.

Contact Washington Municipal Water System

Reach the utility directly for service issues, water quality concerns, or to request your Consumer Confidence Report.

Water Quality Contact

For questions about contaminants, test results, or your Consumer Confidence Report.

OfficeWashington Water Quality Division
DepartmentWater Quality Compliance
Direct line(202) 305-6756

Treatment Plant

Location5529 Treatment Plant Road, Washington, DC
Operator certificationClass A (State certified)
Treatment capacity141 million gallons/day

Recommended water filters for Washington

Filters matched to the specific contaminants in this water supply.

NSF/ANSI 53 certified for lead removal

$80-$750

NSF 53 is the gold standard certification for lead removal. Required when lead is a documented concern.

Clearly Filtered Pitcher Filter
$80-$95 NSF 42, 53, 401, P473
Editorial pick · affiliate link coming soon
Aquasana AQ-5300 Under-Sink Filter
$180-$240 NSF 42, 53, 401
Editorial pick · affiliate link coming soon
AquaTru Countertop Reverse Osmosis
$449-$599 NSF 42, 53, 58, 401, P473
Editorial pick · affiliate link coming soon
Waterdrop G3P800 Tankless RO
$600-$750 NSF 58, 372
View on retailer →

Reverse Osmosis

$249-$750

Chromium-6 requires reverse osmosis for reliable removal. Standard carbon filters do not address it.

AquaTru Countertop Reverse Osmosis
$449-$599 NSF 42, 53, 58, 401, P473
Editorial pick · affiliate link coming soon
Aquasana OptimH2O Reverse Osmosis + Claryum
$429-$549 NSF 42, 53, 58, 401, P473
Editorial pick · affiliate link coming soon
Waterdrop G3P800 Tankless RO
$600-$750 NSF 58, 372
View on retailer →
Waterdrop N1 Countertop RO
$249-$329 NSF 58, 372
View on retailer →

Disclosure: TapWaterSafety earns a commission from purchases made through these links. This does not influence our scoring methodology or filter selection.

Score breakdown

This utility's overall score of 66/100 breaks down across five weighted components. Read the full methodology →

Health Guideline Performance
23 / 40
Legal Compliance
20 / 20
High-Risk Contaminants
7 / 20
Compliance History
10 / 10
Source Water Vulnerability
6 / 10

Contaminants detected — international standards comparison

Every contaminant detected, compared side-by-side against US EPA legal limits, the EU Drinking Water Directive (2020/2184), WHO Guidelines, and California's Public Health Goal (the strictest US benchmark). Why we show multiple standards →

Sample test dates: Water samples were collected between 2022 and 2024. Test dates per contaminant are shown in the table below.

🇪🇺
This water would fail European Union drinking water standards. One or more detected contaminants exceed EU Drinking Water Directive 2020/2184 limits, even though they may be fully legal under US EPA rules. View the standards we compare against →
Contaminant Detected EWG
US health-based
EPA
US legal
EU DWD
Europe
WHO
global
CA PHG
strictest US
Tested
sample year
Status
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
25.0 ppb 0.1 60 60 2023 250× over
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
21.1 ppb 0.1 60 60 2024 211× over
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
18.1 ppb 0.1 60 60 2022 181× over
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
18.3 ppb 0.6 80 100 2022 31× over
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
17.7 ppb 0.6 80 100 2023 30× over
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
15.0 ppb 0.6 80 100 2024 25× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.43 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 2022 10× over
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.183 ppb 0.02 0.02 2023 9.2× over
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.182 ppb 0.02 0.02 2022 9.1× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.2 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 2024 8.6× over
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.15 ppb 0.02 0.02 2024 7.5× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.0 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 2023 7.1× over
Lead
Heavy metal
4.4 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2 2024
Lead
Heavy metal
5.16 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2 2023 Fails EU
Lead
Heavy metal
3.37 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2 2022
Contaminant Detected (2024) EWG EPA EU DWD WHO CA PHG Status
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
15.0 ppb 0.6 80 100 25× over
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
21.1 ppb 0.1 60 60 211× over
Lead
Heavy metal
4.4 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.15 ppb 0.02 0.02 7.5× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.2 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 8.6× over
Contaminant Detected (2023) EWG EPA EU DWD WHO CA PHG Status
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
17.7 ppb 0.6 80 100 30× over
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
25.0 ppb 0.1 60 60 250× over
Lead
Heavy metal
5.16 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2 Fails EU
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.183 ppb 0.02 0.02 9.2× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.0 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 7.1× over
Contaminant Detected (2022) EWG EPA EU DWD WHO CA PHG Status
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Disinfection byproduct
18.3 ppb 0.6 80 100 31× over
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Disinfection byproduct
18.1 ppb 0.1 60 60 181× over
Lead
Heavy metal
3.37 ppb 0 15 5 10 0.2
Chromium-6 (Hexavalent)
Heavy metal
0.182 ppb 0.02 0.02 9.1× over
Nitrate
Inorganic
1.43 mg/L 0.14 10 11.3 11.3 10 10× over

All values in the unit of the detected level. Red cells indicate the detected level exceeds that standard. Some contaminants have limits in some jurisdictions but not others (shown as —). The "Tested" column shows the year each contaminant sample was collected.

Sources: US EPA, EU Drinking Water Directive 2020/2184, WHO Guidelines (4th ed.), California OEHHA PHGs, EWG Tap Water Database, and Washington Municipal Water System's Consumer Confidence Report.

Washington Municipal Water System service area

This water system serves 1 community in District of Columbia County, District of Columbia. Click any city for its dedicated tap water quality page.

About this water system

Public Water System ID
DC6696890
Owner type
Local government
Source water
Surface water (Potomac River)
Disinfection method
Chloramine
Service connections
225,600
Service area
Washington, District of Columbia County, District of Columbia