What EPA data, PFAS monitoring, and independent health research reveals about Cleveland's drinking water -- and what you can do about it.
Cleveland draws from Lake Erie -- which experiences harmful algal blooms that produce cyanotoxins.
Cyanotoxins can pass through standard treatment -- 2014's Toledo water crisis raised regional awareness.
Ohio has significant industrial PFAS contamination; Cleveland water has been tested above health goals.
Cleveland has thousands of lead service lines in older neighborhoods still in service.
Cleveland water meets EPA legal standards but meeting standards is not the same as being free of contaminants. EPA limits are set based on feasibility, not always on what is safest for health. Enter your ZIP above to see the full violation history and PFAS data for your specific water system.
Even compliant water can contain contaminants at levels above what independent health scientists consider safe -- particularly for PFAS, lead, and chromium-6. An EPA-certified RO system removes 95-99% of all detected contaminants and costs $0.10-$0.25 per gallon, compared to $1-$3 for bottled water.
For most US cities, a reverse osmosis system under the sink is the gold standard -- it removes lead, PFAS, arsenic, nitrates, fluoride, and virtually everything else. For renters, a Waterdrop D4 countertop RO requires zero installation. Enter your ZIP above to get personalized recommendations based on your actual water report.
City-wide data is just the start. Enter your ZIP to see your exact water system's EPA report, PFAS levels, and violation history.
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