A Comprehensive Guide to Water Contaminants and Filtration Strategies

From lead and PFAS to nitrates and chlorine, here is what can end up in your tap water, why each one matters, and the filtration that removes it.

June 16, 2025 06/16/25 Contaminants 13 min read 13 min
Updated June 2026
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What Is in Your Tap Water, and Is It Safe to Drink?

You fill a glass at the kitchen sink, hold it up to the light, and it looks perfectly clear. The trouble is that clear water can still carry lead, PFAS, nitrates, or chlorine, and none of those leave a color, a taste, or a smell you would notice.

So here is the honest answer most people are looking for: in the United States, public tap water is treated and regulated, and for the great majority of homes it is safe to drink by federal standards. But "safe by EPA standards" is not the same as "nothing in it." The most common tap water contaminants are invisible. Dozens of substances are barely regulated, or not regulated at all. And a 2023 U.S. Geological Survey study detected at least one PFAS compound in roughly 45% of US tap water samples.

This guide walks through what actually shows up in tap water, where it comes from, what the health concern is, the limits the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sets, and the filtration that removes each one. Crystal Quest® has designed and built water filtration systems in the USA for over 30 years. The goal here is simple: help you figure out what is in your water and what to do about it.

The Short Answer

If your water comes from a regulated public utility, it is generally safe to drink. If you are on a private well, no one tests it for you, so the responsibility is yours. Either way, "regulated" does not mean "pure." Knowing which contaminants are likely in your water, then matching a filter to them, is how you close that gap.

Key Takeaways

Clear Does Not Mean Clean

Most tap water contaminants are invisible. Meeting EPA limits keeps water legally safe, but it does not mean zero contaminants are present.

Some Are Barely Regulated

PFAS only got enforceable federal limits in 2024, and microplastics still have none. Regulation tends to lag the science by years.

No Single Filter Catches Everything

Carbon, reverse osmosis, and ion exchange each target different contaminants. The right setup matches your actual water, not a marketing claim.

Testing Comes First

A water test shows which contaminants you have and at what levels, so you treat the real problem instead of guessing.

The 10 Most Common Tap Water Contaminants (at a Glance)

If you only have a minute, start here. These are the contaminants most likely to turn up in US tap water, what each one does, and the kind of filtration that removes it. The deeper dives and EPA limits follow below.

Contaminant Where It Comes From Why It Matters What Removes It
Chlorine & chloramine Added by utilities to disinfect Taste and odor, skin and eye irritation at higher residuals Activated carbon (catalytic carbon for chloramine)
Lead Old pipes, solder, brass fixtures No safe level; harms brain development in children Reverse osmosis, ion exchange, lead-rated carbon block
PFAS Industrial discharge, firefighting foam, runoff Linked to immune, liver, and cancer effects Reverse osmosis, activated carbon, anion exchange
Nitrates Fertilizer and septic runoff (common in wells) Blue baby syndrome in infants Reverse osmosis, nitrate-selective ion exchange
Arsenic Natural bedrock, mining, some pesticides Long-term cancer risk Reverse osmosis, anion exchange, activated alumina
Fluoride Added for dental health, plus natural deposits Skeletal and dental effects above the limit Reverse osmosis, activated alumina, anion exchange
Sediment, rust, and sand Aging mains, well water, pipe corrosion Cloudiness; shields germs from disinfection Sediment and micron-rated filtration
VOCs Industrial solvents, fuel, runoff Several are linked to cancer and organ damage Activated carbon, reverse osmosis with carbon
Hydrogen sulfide Bacteria and minerals, mostly in wells Rotten-egg odor (mainly a nuisance) Oxidation plus filtration, catalytic carbon
Microplastics Breakdown of plastic waste, packaging Emerging concern, still under study Reverse osmosis, fine sub-micron filtration

Notice the pattern: a few technologies do most of the heavy lifting, but no single one handles every row. That is the whole game with water treatment, and it is why the rest of this guide focuses on matching the method to the contaminant.


The Four Categories of Water Contaminants

The EPA sorts drinking water contaminants into four broad groups (see the agency's contaminant categories). Knowing which category you are dealing with points you toward the right treatment.

Chemical and Heavy Metals

This group covers inorganic chemicals and heavy metals in water: lead, arsenic, chromium, mercury, cadmium, nitrates, fluoride, and uranium. They dissolve completely, so you cannot filter them out by trapping particles. Removing them takes reverse osmosis, ion exchange, or a targeted adsorption media.

Organic Contaminants

Carbon-based compounds such as pesticides, herbicides, industrial solvents (VOCs), and pharmaceuticals. Activated carbon is the workhorse here, because these molecules stick to its huge internal surface area through a process called adsorption.

Biological Contaminants

Living threats: bacteria, viruses, and protozoan cysts like Giardia and Cryptosporidium. Utilities control these with disinfection, but well owners and anyone facing a boil-water notice need ultraviolet (UV) treatment or reverse osmosis to be sure.

Emerging and Unregulated Contaminants

The newest concerns, often discovered faster than regulators can act. PFAS sat in this group for decades before getting enforceable limits in 2024. Microplastics and many pharmaceuticals are still here, detected in water but without a federal limit.


EPA Limits vs. Health Goals

For regulated contaminants, the EPA sets two numbers. The Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) is the enforceable legal limit. The Maximum Contaminant Level Goal (MCLG) is the level with no known health risk, which is a goal, not a law. For substances like lead and arsenic, that goal is zero, which tells you something important: the legal limit is a practical compromise, not a promise of zero risk.

Contaminant EPA Limit (MCL) Health Goal (MCLG) Main Health Concern
Lead 15 ppb action level (treatment technique) Zero Brain and nervous system, especially in children
Arsenic 10 ppb Zero Cancer of the bladder, lung, and skin
Nitrate (as nitrogen) 10 ppm 10 ppm Blue baby syndrome in infants
Fluoride 4.0 ppm 4.0 ppm Skeletal and dental fluorosis above the limit
Uranium 30 ppb Zero Kidney toxicity and radiation exposure
Mercury (inorganic) 2 ppb 2 ppb Kidney damage
PFOA / PFOS (PFAS) 4 ppt Zero Immune, liver, developmental, and cancer effects
Total chromium 100 ppb 100 ppb Chromium-6 under review as a carcinogen

ppb = parts per billion, ppm = parts per million, ppt = parts per trillion. Limits per the EPA National Primary Drinking Water Regulations.

Why the Limit Is Not Always the Goal

Where the MCLG is zero but the legal limit is higher, the EPA is balancing health against what current technology can reliably and affordably achieve across thousands of utilities. At home, a point-of-use filter lets you push well past that compromise toward the health goal.


Contaminant Spotlights

Here is a closer look at the contaminants people ask about most. Each one links to a dedicated guide where we go deeper.

Lead

Lead rarely starts at the treatment plant. It leaches into water from old service lines, solder, and brass fixtures, usually after the water leaves the utility. The CDC is blunt about it: there is no safe level of lead for children, where it lowers IQ and causes learning and behavior problems. Reverse osmosis, ion exchange, and a lead-rated carbon block all remove it. Read the full breakdown in our guide to lead in drinking water.

Arsenic

Arsenic seeps into groundwater from natural bedrock, which is why private wells in some regions carry it. The EPA cut the limit from 50 ppb to 10 ppb in 2006, and the World Health Organization links long-term exposure to cancer of the bladder, lung, and skin. One detail trips up a lot of filters: arsenic comes in two forms. Arsenate, called As(V), carries a charge and is removed well by reverse osmosis, anion exchange, and activated alumina. Arsenite, As(III), is uncharged at normal water pH, so those same methods barely touch it until it is first oxidized into As(V). That is why a real arsenic system pairs an oxidation step with the removal stage. Customers have measured Crystal Quest arsenic systems taking arsenic from 5.1 ppb down to 0.6 ppb in before-and-after testing. The full story is in our arsenic removal guide.

PFAS (Forever Chemicals)

PFAS are a family of thousands of synthetic chemicals used in nonstick and waterproof products. They do not break down in nature, hence the "forever" nickname, and they are now found in tap water nationwide. In 2024 the EPA finalized the first enforceable limits, 4 parts per trillion for PFOA and PFOS, with a health goal of zero. Activated carbon, anion exchange, and reverse osmosis all reduce PFAS, with RO removing more than 99% of most compounds. At the commercial scale, a Crystal Quest PFAS treatment train combining anion-exchange resin with catalytic carbon cut PFOA by more than 98% from heavily contaminated industrial water. See our guide to PFAS in tap water.

Nitrates

Nitrates come from fertilizer and septic runoff, so they are mostly a well-water and farm-country problem. The danger is specific: above the 10 ppm limit, nitrate can cause methemoglobinemia, or blue baby syndrome, in infants under six months. Standard carbon and sediment filters do nothing here. You need reverse osmosis or a nitrate-selective ion-exchange resin. Crystal Quest customers have reported nitrate systems taking well water from 40 ppm down to about 5 ppm.

Fluoride

Most fluoride is added on purpose for dental health, but natural deposits can push levels higher in some areas. The EPA limit is 4.0 ppm, and exposure above it over time can cause skeletal and dental fluorosis. Carbon does not remove fluoride. The effective methods are reverse osmosis, activated alumina, and anion exchange. Our guide to fluoride in your water covers testing and removal in detail.

Chromium-6 (Hexavalent Chromium)

Made famous by the Erin Brockovich case, chromium-6 is the more toxic form of chromium. There is a regulatory gap worth knowing: the EPA sets a limit only for total chromium at 100 ppb, with no separate federal standard for chromium-6 specifically. California is the exception, with a state limit of 10 ppb that took effect in 2024. Strong-base anion exchange and reverse osmosis remove it directly.

Uranium

Uranium occurs naturally in granite and groundwater, making it a private-well concern in certain regions. It is both chemically toxic to the kidneys and radioactive, with an EPA limit of 30 ppb. Reverse osmosis, anion exchange, and activated alumina all remove it. The numbers can run high. One ranch brought Crystal Quest certified lab data showing uranium at 327 ppb, about 11 times the EPA limit, on high-mineral well water. They asked us to engineer whole-property treatment for the household and livestock.

Microplastics

Microplastics are tiny plastic fragments now showing up in tap water worldwide. There is no federal limit yet, though the EPA placed them on its latest contaminant watch list in 2026 (EPA and HHS, 2026), and the health research is still developing. Because they are physical particles, they are removed by physical exclusion: reverse osmosis and tight sub-micron filtration. See how this works in our guide on whether reverse osmosis removes microplastics and PFAS.

Tannins

Tannins are dissolved organics from decaying leaves and vegetation, common in well water near wetlands. They are an aesthetic issue, not a health one, tinting water yellow to brown with a musty taste (the U.S. Geological Survey covers this under water color). Because they are dissolved rather than suspended, a sediment filter will not catch them. Anion exchange is the primary fix. Crystal Quest builds dedicated tannin-removal systems at every scale, from whole-house units to large commercial builds. Start with our guide to tannins in drinking water.


Building a Filtration Strategy for Your Water

Now the practical part. Once you know what is in your water, treatment comes down to two questions: which technology removes your contaminants, and where in the home you install it.

Start by Testing

Guessing leads to buying the wrong filter. A water test tells you exactly which contaminants you have and at what levels. If you are on city water, your utility publishes an annual Consumer Confidence Report that lists what was detected. If you are on a well, no one tests it for you, and the CDC recommends annual testing. Our walkthrough on how to test your water at home covers your options, and Crystal Quest specialists can read your results and point you to the right system.

Match the Technology to the Contaminant

No single filter removes everything, so the honest answer is usually a combination. This table shows what each method handles, and just as important, what it does not.

Contaminant Group What Removes It What Does Not
Sediment, rust, turbidity Sediment and micron-rated filtration, reverse osmosis Carbon alone
Chlorine and chloramine Activated carbon (catalytic for chloramine), redox media Sediment filters
Lead and heavy metals Reverse osmosis, ion exchange, redox media, lead-rated carbon block Plain sediment or basic carbon
PFAS Activated carbon, reverse osmosis, anion exchange Boiling, sediment filters
Nitrates and fluoride Reverse osmosis, selective ion exchange (activated alumina for fluoride) Carbon, sediment filters
VOCs and pesticides Activated carbon, reverse osmosis with a carbon stage Sediment filters
Bacteria, viruses, cysts UV disinfection, reverse osmosis Carbon, sediment filters

A few mechanisms explain most of that table. Activated carbon grabs organic chemicals and chlorine by adsorption, like a sponge with an enormous internal surface. Reverse osmosis pushes water through a membrane so tight it blocks dissolved metals, nitrates, and PFAS. Ion exchange swaps unwanted ions for harmless ones, which is how it pulls out nitrates, fluoride, and hardness. And Eagle Redox Alloy (ERA) media, Crystal Quest's version of KDF, uses a copper-zinc reaction to reduce chlorine and plate out heavy metals. Crystal Quest chose ERA over standard redox media for its higher heavy-metal capacity and longer life in tough water.

Point-of-Use vs. Whole-House

Where you treat depends on the problem. Match the setup to the job:

Point-of-Use (Drinking Water)

How It Works: An under-sink or countertop reverse osmosis system treats only the water you drink and cook with.

Best For: Dissolved contaminants you want gone from drinking water: lead, PFAS, nitrates, fluoride, arsenic.

Why RO: It is the broadest single technology for dissolved contaminants at the tap.

Whole-House (Point-of-Entry)

How It Works: A system at your main line treats every tap, combining sediment, carbon, and redox media in stages.

Best For: Chlorine, chloramine, sediment, and odor you want handled throughout the home, including showers.

Pairs With: A point-of-use RO at the kitchen for the dissolved contaminants whole-house media do not target.

Well Water Treatment

How It Works: Well water often needs a tailored sequence: oxidation for iron and hydrogen sulfide, then targeted media for nitrates, arsenic, tannins, or uranium.

Best For: Private wells, which carry contaminants city water rarely does and which no one monitors for you.

Start With: A full well-water test, since the right sequence depends entirely on what is present.

For larger or higher-mineral water, the engineering gets more specific. Crystal Quest matches the reverse osmosis membrane class to the feed water: standard membranes for ordinary tap water, brackish-water membranes for high-mineral wells, and seawater membranes for the saltiest sources. After 30 years of building these systems, we have found that the membrane and pretreatment choices matter as much as the system size. That is why we spec from a water test, not from a sticker on the box.

Not sure what is in your water?

Start with a test, then let our specialists match a system to your results.


Beyond the Home: Commercial and Emergency Needs

The same contaminants scale up. Crystal Quest serves residential, commercial, and industrial customers from one ISO 9001 certified facility, which means a small business and a large plant get the same engineering approach, sized differently. Commercial reverse osmosis systems run well into the thousands of gallons per day for facilities that need treated water at volume.

For situations without reliable water at all, from off-grid use to a boil-water emergency, a portable reverse osmosis unit like the ROVER portable RO system delivers treated drinking water on the move. Facility managers and commercial buyers can route specifications through our commercial and industrial filtration team.

Ready to take control of your water quality?

Explore Crystal Quest filtration systems, engineered and built in the USA, or talk to a specialist about your specific water.

Frequently Asked Questions About Tap Water Contaminants

What are the most harmful water contaminants?

Lead, arsenic, PFAS, nitrates, and biological pathogens like E. coli and Cryptosporidium are among the most serious, because they carry real health risks at low concentrations. Lead and arsenic both have a health goal of zero, meaning no exposure is considered risk-free.

How do I find out what contaminants are in my tap water?

If you are on city water, read your utility's annual Consumer Confidence Report, which lists everything detected in the supply. If you are on a private well, you are responsible for testing, and the CDC recommends doing it every year. A certified lab test gives you the clearest picture, and a Crystal Quest specialist can help you read the results.

Which filter removes the widest range of contaminants?

Reverse osmosis removes the broadest range in a single technology, including dissolved metals, nitrates, fluoride, PFAS, and most other dissolved contaminants. Pairing it with activated carbon and, for biological threats, UV disinfection covers nearly everything a home faces. No single filter does it all, which is why multi-stage systems exist.

Is it safe to drink tap water?

For most US homes on a regulated public supply, yes, tap water is safe to drink by federal standards. That said, meeting the legal limits does not mean zero contaminants, and private wells are not monitored by anyone. Testing your water and filtering for what it actually contains is how you move from "legally safe" to genuinely clean.

Does boiling water remove contaminants?

Boiling kills bacteria, viruses, and parasites, so it helps during a boil-water notice. It does nothing for dissolved chemical contaminants like lead, arsenic, nitrates, PFAS, or fluoride, and it can actually concentrate them as water evaporates. For those, you need filtration, not heat.

Can one system treat water for a whole building?

Yes. A point-of-entry system installed on the main line treats every tap, and Crystal Quest builds these at residential, commercial, and industrial scale. Many homes pair a whole-house system for chlorine and sediment with a point-of-use reverse osmosis unit at the kitchen for dissolved contaminants in drinking water.