Skip to main content
Tap water and drinking water quality in Atlanta, GA
WATER QUALITY REPORT

Atlanta, GA tap water: what’s in it in 2026

Reviewed by Joe Letorney, 30-year water treatment expert · Former WQA Certified Water Treatment Specialist (CWS), Level VI

Atlanta Watershed pulls from the Chattahoochee — a river stressed by growth, runoff, and periodic drought. PFAS and chloramine DBPs are the recurring concerns in metro monitoring.

Georgia's relatively soft source water means many Atlantans skip filtration entirely. Post-2024 PFAS rules changed that calculus for anyone on surface water blends with detections.

Boil-water advisories after main breaks are frequent in older intown grids. Keep a certified pitcher filled during advisories and replace cartridges after sediment spikes.

See best water filters for lead removal and what filters remove PFAS.

Check water hardness in Atlanta

Disinfection byproductsIndustrial pollution in Chattahoochee RiverAging infrastructure
77/ 88
WATERCHECKUP SAFETY SCORE
Grade: B+
Fair

WaterCheckup Safety Score — an independent index from EPA public data and our formula. Not your utility’s official water quality rating, an EPA compliance grade, or a test of water at your tap. How we score →

Same score for your ZIP — look up your ZIP for the full contaminant report
GENERALLY OK
Based on water safety score
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT ATLANTA WATER

Atlanta water currently shows no major violations in EPA monitoring data. That said, your home's internal plumbing can add lead or other contaminants after water leaves the treatment plant — especially in homes built before 1986.

Disinfection byproducts
Industrial pollution in Chattahoochee River
Aging infrastructure
Public water systems in Georgia
5,598
EPA PWSID (this report)
GA1210001
TTHMs (utility avg.)
41.3 ppb
HAA5 (utility avg.)
32.6 ppb
PFAS compounds (UCMR5)
4
LEGAL DOES NOT ALWAYS MEAN SAFE

Atlantawater may meet federal EPA limits while still showing contaminants above independent health guidelines (EWG, state advisories). EPA MCLs are often set on treatment feasibility — not a "zero risk" threshold. Compare levels below to health guidelines and state/U.S. utility averages, then see which filter technologies address your profile.

CONTAMINANTS IN ATLANTA WATER

EPA UCMR5 PFAS plus utility/EWG averages from our contaminant bundle. Run a ZIP report for live SDWIS samples at your address.

Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
41.3 ppb (EPA limit 80 ppb)275.3× health guidelineModerate
This utility
41.3
U.S. avg
31.0
State avg
39.0

EWG health guideline: 0.15 ppb

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 30.97 ppb · GA utility avg: 39.04 ppb

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
32.6 ppb (EPA limit 60 ppb)543.3× health guidelineModerate
This utility
32.6
U.S. avg
21.6
State avg
25.5

EWG health guideline: 0.06 ppb (HAA5)

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 21.57 ppb · GA utility avg: 25.52 ppb

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Chlorate
194.3 ppbLower concern
This utility
194
U.S. avg
161
State avg
163

Can impair thyroid function — most concerning during pregnancy and childhood.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Haloacetic Acids (HAA9)
54.3 ppbLower concern
This utility
54.3
U.S. avg
23.6
State avg
31.1

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 23.64 ppb · GA utility avg: 31.10 ppb

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Chloroform
33 ppbLower concern
This utility
33.0
U.S. avg
17.8
State avg
29.7

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 17.82 ppb · GA utility avg: 29.71 ppb

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Trichloroacetic Acid
16.8 ppb42× health guidelineLower concern
This utility
16.8
U.S. avg
7.02
State avg
12.8

EWG health guideline: 0.4 ppb

Disinfection byproduct linked to bladder cancer and developmental effects at high exposure.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Dichloroacetic Acid
15.7 ppb78.5× health guidelineLower concern
This utility
15.7
U.S. avg
8.88
State avg
12.4

EWG health guideline: 0.2 ppb

Disinfection byproduct linked to bladder cancer and possible reproductive effects.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

PFBA
8.3 pptLower concern

PFAS (“forever chemicals”) persist in the body. NSF 58 reverse osmosis or NSF P473-certified filters remove PFAS at the tap — standard pitchers do not.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Bromodichloromethane
5.25 ppb87.5× health guidelineLower concern
This utility
5.25
U.S. avg
6.47
State avg
5.32

EWG health guideline: 0.06 ppb

THM component linked to cancer and reproductive harm with long-term exposure.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

PFPeA
4.8 pptLower concern

PFAS (“forever chemicals”) persist in the body. NSF 58 reverse osmosis or NSF P473-certified filters remove PFAS at the tap — standard pitchers do not.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

PFBS
4.6 pptLower concern

PFAS (“forever chemicals”) persist in the body. NSF 58 reverse osmosis or NSF P473-certified filters remove PFAS at the tap — standard pitchers do not.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

PFHxA
4.6 pptLower concern

PFAS (“forever chemicals”) persist in the body. NSF 58 reverse osmosis or NSF P473-certified filters remove PFAS at the tap — standard pitchers do not.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Dibromochloromethane
2.31 ppb23.1× health guidelineLower concern
This utility
2.31
U.S. avg
4.14
State avg
2.85

EWG health guideline: 0.1 ppb

THM component linked to cancer and harm to fetal development.

Removes with: RO · Carbon

Perfluoropentanoic Acid (PFPeA)
1.95 pptLower concern
This utility
1.95
U.S. avg
3.00
State avg
3.31

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 3.00 ppt · GA utility avg: 3.31 ppt

Removes with: RO

Perfluorohexanoic Acid (PFHxA)
1.94 pptLower concern
This utility
1.94
U.S. avg
2.85
State avg
3.11

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 2.85 ppt · GA utility avg: 3.11 ppt

Removes with: RO

Perfluorobutanoic Acid (PFBA)
1.23 pptLower concern
This utility
1.23
U.S. avg
3.38
State avg
1.58

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 3.38 ppt · GA utility avg: 1.58 ppt

Removes with: RO

Perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS)
0.93 pptLower concern
This utility
0.93
U.S. avg
1.89
State avg
1.80

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 1.89 ppt · GA utility avg: 1.80 ppt

Removes with: RO

Nitrate and nitrite
0.794 ppm (EPA limit 10 ppm)Lower concern
This utility
0.79
U.S. avg
1.04
State avg
0.46

EWG Tap Water Atlas utility average (2021–2023) · U.S. utility avg (EWG Atlas sample): 1.04 ppm · GA utility avg: 0.46 ppm

Removes with: RO · Carbon

U.S. and state averages from EWG Tap Water Atlas utilities in our database. For your exact tap, use a ZIP report — home plumbing can differ from utility averages.

1

Atlanta pulls from the Chattahoochee River, which carries industrial and agricultural runoff.

2

The system has logged multiple violations for disinfection byproducts over the years.

3

Significant aging infrastructure in Atlanta's distribution system creates contamination risk.

4

EWG flagged Atlanta water for exceeding health guidelines on several detected contaminants.

PFAS TESTING DATA — EPA UCMR5
Testing period 2023–2025 · Last updated Q1 2026
⚠️
PFAS DETECTED (BELOW MCL)
Max detected: 8.3 ppt · 4 compounds found · 0 EPA MCL violations
Compound
Level (ppt)
EPA MCL
Health Limit
PFBA
8.3
✓ Within
PFPeA
4.8
✓ Within
PFHxA
4.6
✓ Within
PFBS
4.6
✓ Within

Source: EPA UCMR5 national monitoring dataset · Testing period 2023–2025 · MCL = Maximum Contaminant Level (legally enforceable limit) · Health limit = EPA health advisory threshold

🔔 Get alerts if Atlanta's water data changes:
WHICH FILTER TECHNOLOGY WORKS FOR ATLANTA?

Reference matrix — not specific brands. NSF-certified carbon blocks, reverse osmosis (NSF 58), and ion-exchange softeners address different contaminants. Product picks below match this profile.

Contaminant
Carbon
RO
Ion exch.
Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs)
Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Trichloroacetic Acid
Dichloroacetic Acid
Bromodichloromethane
Dibromochloromethane
TEST YOUR TAP OR FILTER NOW?

Atlantautility data is a strong baseline — but lead often comes from your home's pipes, and PFAS can vary by neighborhood. Choose certified lab testing for certainty, or skip straight to NSF-certified filters matched to this profile.

STEP 1 · VERIFY AT YOUR FAUCET
Test before you buy a $300+ filter

SimpleLab Tap Score mail-in panels test PFAS, lead, nitrates, bacteria, and 100+ contaminants at your kitchen tap. Results in about a week — then pick filtration with real numbers, not guesses.

Tap Score City Test — from $89 →

Accredited labs · Best if you have old plumbing, pregnancy, or want proof before installing RO

STEP 2 · FIX IT NOW
Ready to filter based on this report?

Get NSF 58 / NSF 53 picks matched to Atlanta's PFAS, lead, and disinfection byproduct profile — reviewed by a 30-year water treatment expert.

Take the 3-question filter quiz →

Best when contaminants are already flagged above and you want the right RO or pitcher today

Clean water splash — certified water filter recommendations
WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT

Based on Atlanta's water profile above, here's the exact system we recommend — and why it's right for this water supply specifically.

Clean water splash — certified water filter recommendations

Certified Filter Recommendations

Matched to what's actually in your water

TOP PICKS FOR ATLANTA
Contaminants detected in local water
#1
Aquasana SmartFlow RO
MOST CERTIFIED
Aquasana  ·  ~$449
WQA Gold Seal + NSF 42/53/58/401. Most certifications of any under-sink RO. Removes 90+ contaminants.
WHY THIS FOR ATLANTA · Chosen for Atlanta because PFAS was detected at 8.3 ppt in EPA UCMR5 monitoring — above the 4 ppt federal limit. Reverse osmosis removes 99%+ of PFAS compounds and is the only reliably certified technology for this.
#2
AquaTru Under-Sink RO
EASIEST FILTER CHANGE
AquaTru  ·  ~$375
NSF 42/53/58 certified. Quick-change filters, no tools. Compact tankless design, 4-stage filtration.
Not sure which filter is right for you? Take the 3-question quiz →
WATER SYSTEM -- EPA SDWIS
System Name
Atlanta Department of Watershed Management
EPA PWSID
GA1210001
Population Served
500K
State
GA

COMMON QUESTIONS

Is Atlanta tap water safe to drink in 2026?

Atlanta water meets EPA legal standards, but meeting legal standards is not the same as being free of health concerns. EPA limits are set based on treatment feasibility, not always on what independent scientists consider safe. The main concerns for Atlanta residents are disinfection byproducts and industrial pollution in chattahoochee river. Enter your ZIP above to see the full violation history for your specific water system.

Does Atlanta water have PFAS?

EPA UCMR5 monitoring data for Atlanta (water system GA1210001) is shown above. PFAS — sometimes called "forever chemicals" — are synthetic compounds that don't break down in the body. Only reverse osmosis systems or NSF 58-certified carbon block filters reliably remove PFAS from tap water. Standard pitcher filters do not remove PFAS.

Does Atlanta water have lead?

Lead in tap water almost always comes from the pipes inside your home or building, not the treatment plant. Homes built before 1986 in Atlanta are most at risk because they may have lead solder, brass fittings, or lead service lines. The EPA has no safe level for lead in children. An NSF/ANSI 53-certified filter or reverse osmosis system removes lead at the tap.

What water filter is best for Atlanta?

For Atlanta's water profile — disinfection byproducts, industrial pollution in chattahoochee river — a reverse osmosis system addresses the widest range of contaminants. Under-sink RO (Waterdrop G3P600, Aquasana SmartFlow) is the gold standard for homeowners. Renters can use a countertop RO like the Waterdrop K19-S Countertop RO — zero installation required. Clearly Filtered pitchers are the best non-RO option for PFAS and lead.

How do I get my Atlanta water tested?

For the most accurate results for your specific tap, use a certified mail-in lab test rather than relying on city-wide data. SimpleLab Tap Score tests for 100+ contaminants including PFAS, lead, arsenic, and nitrates. Results come with a detailed health assessment and filter recommendations. City-wide EPA data like what you see above is a strong baseline, but your home's plumbing can add contaminants after the water leaves the treatment plant.

LEAD SERVICE LINE RISK
Does your street have lead pipes?

As of October 2024, all US public water systems must publish a public inventory of their lead service lines — the pipes connecting the water main to your home. Even if your public water system water tests clean at the treatment plant, lead can leach from these pipes into your tap. Homes built before 1986 are most at risk.

EPA Official Service Line Inventory →
Federal LCRR inventory data for Atlanta Department of Watershed Management · PWSID GA1210001
💡 Homes built before 1986 may have lead solder or service lines. A filter certified NSF/ANSI 53 removes lead at the tap regardless of pipe material.
STAY INFORMED
Get Atlanta water alerts

We'll notify you when new PFAS data, EPA violations, or contamination alerts drop for Atlanta. One email, no spam, unsubscribe any time.

Check your specific address

City-wide data is just the start. Enter your ZIP to see your exact water system's EPA report, PFAS levels, and violation history — then get the right filter for your home.

Fix My Water — Free →

RELATED GUIDES

PFAS
Is PFAS in My Tap Water?
Lead
Best Filters for Lead Removal
Filters
What Filter Removes PFAS?
EPA
What Does an EPA Violation Mean?
Filters
Reverse Osmosis: Pros & Cons
Health
Tap Water Safety During Pregnancy
RANKINGS
Worst Water Systems in the US

COMPARE WATER QUALITY IN OTHER CITIES

Savannah, GA
High concern · Industrial PFAS from chemical plants
Chicago, IL
High concern · Lead service lines
Los Angeles, CA
High concern · Chromium-6 (hexavalent chromium)
New York City, NY
High concern · PFAS detected above EPA limits (PFOS 106 ppt, limit: 4 ppt)
Phoenix, AZ
High concern · High TDS / hard water
Philadelphia, PA
High concern · Lead service lines
Detroit, MI
High concern · Lead service lines
Las Vegas, NV
High concern · Extremely hard water
Baltimore, MD
High concern · Lead service lines
Memphis, TN
High concern · PFAS contamination
Louisville, KY
High concern · Ohio River contamination
Cleveland, OH
High concern · Lead service lines
Browse all 50 states — all free →

Water public water system operators: Publish your official CCR on WaterCheckup free →

Reviewed by Joe Letorney, 30-year water treatment expert · Former WQA Certified Water Treatment Specialist (CWS), Level VI