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Massachusetts Water Quality
328
Utilities in database
10.0M
Residents served
18%
On private wells
3
Key contaminants tracked
Drinking Water in Massachusetts
Massachusetts has 328 community water systems serving approximately 10.0 million residents. Primary water sources include surface water. The most commonly reported contaminants include lead, disinfection byproducts, nitrates. 18% of Massachusetts residents rely on private wells. DEP holds primary enforcement authority under the Safe Drinking Water Act.
Utilities in Massachusetts
326–328 of 328Key Contaminant Concerns in Massachusetts
Lead
Lead is a naturally occurring heavy metal that was widely used in plumbing infrastructure until it was banned for new installations in 1986. An estimated 9.2 million lead service lines still connect homes to public water mains across the United States, along with millions of homes with lead solder in their internal plumbing.
Nitrates
Nitrate (NO₃⁻) is a nitrogen-containing compound that forms naturally through the decomposition of organic matter. At elevated concentrations — almost always from human activity — nitrate interferes with the blood's ability to carry oxygen. The United States produces over 23 million tons of nitrogen fertilizer annually, making agricultural runoff the dominant source of nitrate contamination.
DBPs
When utilities add chlorine to water to kill pathogens, it reacts with dissolved organic matter — leaves, algae, soil — to produce disinfection byproducts (DBPs). Over 600 DBPs have been identified. The EPA regulates two groups: total trihalomethanes (TTHMs, including chloroform) and haloacetic acids (HAA5). DBP levels tend to be highest in surface water systems and in warm months when organic matter is elevated.
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Data source: Utility data from EPA SDWIS. 328 active community water systems ingested. CCR contaminant data ingestion in progress.
Last updated: 2026-04-19