What Safety Tests Should I Run On My Residential Water Well?

Are you confident that your well water is safe to drink and use every day?

You rely on your residential well for drinking, cooking, bathing, and watering your yard, so regular testing is essential to protect your health and your home. This guide walks you through the safety tests you should run on your well, how to interpret results, how to sample correctly, and what to do if a problem shows up.

Table of Contents

Why you should test your well water regularly

Testing confirms whether your water is safe and whether treatment or repairs are needed. Contaminants can enter your well from natural geology, nearby septic systems, agricultural activities, spills, or changes in groundwater, so periodic testing helps you catch problems early.

How often you should test

You should test at least once a year for basic contaminants and more often if circumstances change around your property. Testing frequency increases if you have small children, pregnant household members, a recent change in taste or smell, well repair, flooding, or nearby land-use changes.

Basic categories of well water tests

Water tests fall into microbiological, chemical, physical, and radiological categories. Each category tells you something different about safety, aesthetics, or operational problems with your well and treatment equipment.

Microbiological tests

Microbiological testing checks for bacteria and other pathogens that can make you sick. These tests usually look for total coliforms and E. coli as indicators of contamination.

Chemical tests

Chemical testing measures inorganic and organic compounds such as nitrates, metals (iron, lead, arsenic), pesticides, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Some chemicals affect health directly, while others cause taste, odor, or staining issues.

Physical tests

Physical tests measure pH, hardness, turbidity, total dissolved solids (TDS), and conductivity. These affect plumbing, appliances, and how well treatment systems will work.

Radiological tests

Radiological testing looks for naturally occurring radioactive substances, like uranium or radon, which can be present depending on local geology. Testing is especially relevant in regions known to have higher background radioactivity.

What Safety Tests Should I Run On My Residential Water Well?

Microbiological testing: total coliform and E. coli

You should test for total coliform and E. coli at least once a year and any time you suspect contamination. Total coliforms indicate whether bacteria from the environment can enter your well; E. coli indicates fecal contamination and is an immediate health concern.

What a positive result means

If you get a positive total coliform result, it means your well has a pathway for bacteria to enter and you should retest and inspect the well. A positive E. coli result means the water is unsafe to drink until treated and the well is disinfected.

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What to do if bacteria are present

If bacteria are detected, stop drinking the water and use bottled or boiled water until the problem is resolved. Disinfect (shock) the well, fix any structural issues, disinfect plumbing, and retest to confirm the water is clear.

Nitrate and nitrite: why you need to test

You should test for nitrates and nitrites annually, especially if you live near farmland, septic systems, or have livestock. High nitrates are dangerous to infants (risk of methemoglobinemia or “blue baby” syndrome) and can indicate contamination from fertilizers or septic systems.

Safe limits and health risks

The EPA health-based limit for nitrate (as nitrogen) is 10 mg/L and nitrite (as nitrogen) is 1 mg/L. If your nitrate level approaches or exceeds these values, stop using the water for infant formula and consult a water professional and your physician.

Iron and manganese: aesthetics and scale

You should test for iron and manganese at least once a year, or whenever you notice staining, metallic taste, or discoloration in laundry or plumbing fixtures. These metals are common in groundwater and cause stains, clogging, and taste issues.

What is a safe limit of iron in well water?

The EPA secondary maximum contaminant level (SMCL) for iron is 0.3 mg/L (milligrams per liter). This is an aesthetic standard related to staining and taste rather than a health-based limit; iron at higher levels commonly causes reddish-brown stains and metallic taste.

Manganese and other related concerns

EPA’s secondary guideline for manganese is 0.05 mg/L (50 µg/L) for aesthetic concerns. Both iron and manganese can foul filters and cause problems for softeners and other treatment systems.

What Safety Tests Should I Run On My Residential Water Well?

Lead: testing and first-draw samples

You should test for lead if you have older plumbing, brass fixtures, or if your service line is metal. Lead is most likely to appear in the first-draw sample after water has sat in pipes, so you’ll often be asked to provide a “first-draw” sample for lead testing.

Health effects and action levels

There is no safe level of lead for children; for public water systems the EPA action level is 0.015 mg/L (15 µg/L). For private wells there is no federal regulation, but you should aim for as low as technically feasible and take action if testing shows elevated levels.

Arsenic: a silent contaminant

You should test for arsenic at least once when you buy a property and periodically thereafter if your area’s geology is likely to contain arsenic. Arsenic is tasteless and odorless and poses significant long-term health risks including cancer with chronic exposure.

Regulatory limit and health guidance

The EPA maximum contaminant level (MCL) for arsenic is 0.010 mg/L (10 µg/L). If your arsenic concentration is above this level, you should install appropriate treatment, typically reverse osmosis, anion exchange, or specialized media, and consider alternative drinking water until treated.

Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) and petroleum products

Test for VOCs and petroleum compounds if you are near gas stations, industrial sites, dry cleaners, or areas of heavy agricultural chemical use. These contaminants can be highly toxic even at low concentrations and often require advanced treatment.

Common VOCs and health impacts

Benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene (BTEX), and solvents can cause acute and chronic health problems. If a VOC is detected, stop using the water until you know the level and treatment options, and consult with a licensed professional for remediation.

What Safety Tests Should I Run On My Residential Water Well?

Hydrogen sulfide and rotten-egg smell

If your water smells like rotten eggs, test for hydrogen sulfide. It is common in groundwater due to decomposition or sulfide minerals and typically causes odor and taste problems rather than major health risks at low levels.

Treatment options

Hydrogen sulfide can often be treated with aeration, activated carbon, or oxidizing filters depending on concentration. If you have high levels, you may need a professional-level aeration or oxidizing media system.

pH, hardness, TDS, turbidity, and conductivity

You should test for pH, hardness, total dissolved solids (TDS), turbidity, and conductivity annually to monitor water quality and equipment performance. These physical parameters affect corrosion, scale buildup, soap performance, and the effectiveness of treatment systems.

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Typical concerns and remedies

Low pH (acidic water) can corrode pipes and release metals into the water; raising pH with neutralizing filters helps. Hard water causes scale, and softeners or other conditioning systems can address hardness; TDS and turbidity indicate dissolved minerals and particles that may require filtration or reverse osmosis.

Radon in water: when to test

Test for radon in water if radon gas is a known problem in your area or if indoor air radon tests are high. Radon in water is usually a smaller component of household radon risk compared to soil gas, but it can contribute to indoor air levels when water is agitated (showers, laundering).

Guidance on testing and mitigation

State guidance and recommendations vary; contact your state radon office for local standards and testing labs. If radon in water is high, treatment options include aeration systems and GAC (granular activated carbon) depending on levels and other contaminants present.

What Safety Tests Should I Run On My Residential Water Well?

How to collect a proper water sample

Proper sampling is crucial — otherwise results may be misleading. Use the correct sample bottles (sterile for bacteria, acid-preserved for metals), follow lab instructions, and avoid disinfecting the faucet immediately prior to sampling since the sample should represent typical water.

Step-by-step sampling tips

For bacteria: use the sterile bottle, disinfect the faucet exterior with a bleach wipe, run cold water for a short time, then collect without touching the bottle rim. For metals: collect after flushing until water temperature stabilizes if the lab requires a flushed sample, or collect first-draw for lead as instructed. Keep samples cool and deliver them to the lab quickly, usually within 24 hours.

Choosing a lab and using home test kits

Use a state-certified or accredited lab for health-related testing because they follow protocols and provide defensible results. Home test kits can indicate a problem but often lack accuracy and may not capture some contaminants at low levels, so confirm positives with a certified lab.

Finding the right lab

Contact your state health department or environmental agency for a list of certified labs. For real estate transactions or official reporting, a certified lab with chain-of-custody procedures is required.

Interpreting results: what the numbers mean

When you get results, compare them to EPA MCLs (for federally regulated contaminants) or to state recommendations and health guidelines. For private wells, there’s no federal enforcement but you should use EPA standards or state guidance as a benchmark for safety.

When to be concerned

You should be concerned if bacteria are detected, if nitrate or arsenic exceed EPA limits, or if lead concentrations are high. For aesthetic contaminants like iron or manganese above SMCLs that primarily cause taste and staining, consider treatment to protect appliances and comfort.

Table: Common contaminants, typical sources, limits, and actions

ContaminantTypical sourceEPA guidance / limitHealth or aesthetic concernRecommended action
Total coliform / E. coliSeptic leakage, surface water intrusionNone acceptable for E. coli; any presence means problemAcute illness from pathogensStop drinking, disinfect well, fix source, retest
Nitrate (as N)Fertilizers, septic systems, animal waste10 mg/L (as N)Infants — methemoglobinemiaAlternate water for infants, treat (RO, ion exchange)
Nitrite (as N)Similar to nitrate1 mg/L (as N)Infants — methemoglobinemiaSame as nitrate
IronNatural geology, corrosionSMCL 0.3 mg/LStaining, taste, cloggingOxidizing filters, water softeners, sequestration
ManganeseNatural geologySMCL 0.05 mg/LStaining, neurological risk at high chronic dosesSpecialized filters, RO
LeadOld pipes/fittings, corrosionEPA action level 0.015 mg/L (public systems)Neurotoxin, children at riskReplace plumbing, corrosion control, point-of-use RO
ArsenicNatural geology, miningMCL 0.010 mg/LCarcinogenic, long-term riskRO, anion exchange, alternate source
FluorideNatural or added in systemsMCL 4.0 mg/L; optimal ~0.7 mg/LDental fluorosis at high levelsIf high, RO/activated alumina
VOCs (e.g., benzene)Fuel spills, industrialVaries by compound (e.g., benzene MCL 0.005 mg/L)Acute/chronic toxicityAdvanced treatment (air stripping, carbon), stop source
TDSDissolved mineralsSMCL 500 mg/LTaste, corrosion, scalingRO, blending with treated water
SulfateGeology/wastewaterSMCL 250 mg/LTaste, laxative at high levelsRO, alternative source
Hydrogen sulfideSulfur bacteria, geologyNo EPA limitRotten-egg smell, corrosionAeration, filtration, chlorination
Radon (gas in water)GeologyNo federal MCL for water; check state guidanceLung cancer risk from airborne radonAeration, GAC depending on levels
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Treatment options: matching solutions to problems

Choosing the right treatment depends on your contaminant, water chemistry, and household needs. Typical treatments include chlorination and shock disinfection for bacteria, point-of-use reverse osmosis for arsenic or nitrates, water softeners for hardness and iron (chelation vs oxidation), and granular activated carbon for some organics.

Table: Treatment methods, what they treat, pros and cons

TreatmentTypical contaminants treatedProsCons
Shock chlorinationBacteriaInexpensive, effective short termDoesn’t protect against recontamination; won’t remove many chemicals
UV disinfectionBacteria, virusesEffective for microbes, no chemicalsNo residual disinfectant, doesn’t treat chemicals or turbidity
Reverse osmosis (RO)Nitrate, arsenic, TDS, leadHighly effective for many contaminantsWastewater brine, limited flow, needs maintenance
Ion exchange (anions)Nitrate, arsenic (specific resins)Effective for targeted ionsResin sensitivity, requires regeneration solution
Water softener (ion exchange)Hardness, some iron (clear-water iron)Improves soap performance, reduces scalingMay increase sodium; not effective for colloidal iron
Oxidizing filters (manganese greensand)Iron, manganese, hydrogen sulfideGood for dissolved formsRequire regeneration/periodic maintenance
Aeration systemsVOCs (some), hydrogen sulfide, radon in waterEffective for gasesMay need subsequent filtration for other contaminants
Granular activated carbon (GAC)VOCs, some organicsRemoves taste and odor, wide rangeSaturates and requires replacement, may concentrate radon in media

Cost considerations

Costs vary widely: simple lab tests range from $30–$200 depending on the panel; shock chlorination is inexpensive ($50–$200 for DIY), while installed treatment systems often range from $700 for small point-of-use units to $5,000–$20,000 for whole-house systems. Factor in ongoing maintenance, filter replacement, electricity, and annual servicing.

Budgeting for testing and treatment

Start with a comprehensive lab test for common contaminants (bacteria, nitrates, metals, pH, hardness, TDS). If problems are found, get treatment quotes and consider alternatives like bottled water or temporary solutions for drinking water while systems are installed.

Steps to take if your well tests positive for contaminants

If your lab reports unsafe results, take immediate actions based on the contaminant. For bacteria, stop using the water for drinking and call a well professional; for chemical contaminants above health-based levels, consider alternative water for drinking and consult a certified water-treatment specialist.

Practical immediate steps

Use bottled water or boil water for at least one minute for drinking and cooking (boiling will inactivate microbes but will not remove chemicals). For chemical contamination, stop using the water for consumption until you have treatment or an alternative source.

Well inspection and maintenance

You should have your well inspected every few years and after major events (flooding, earthquake, pump replacement). Regular maintenance includes checking the well cap and casing, ensuring proper drainage away from the well, and making sure nearby activities don’t create contamination risk.

When to call a professional

Call a licensed well contractor or certified water treatment professional if you detect contamination, notice sudden changes in water quality, or need to install treatment systems. For electrical or structural issues, use licensed tradespeople.

Recommended baseline test panel

When establishing a baseline for your well, test the following at minimum: total coliform/E. coli, nitrate/nitrite, pH, hardness, TDS, iron, manganese, arsenic, lead, and sodium. Add pesticide or VOC panels if you’re near agricultural or industrial activity.

When buying a home or transferring ownership

You should test the well before completing a purchase. A comprehensive lab report protects you and ensures any necessary treatment or negotiation can occur based on valid water-quality data.

Real estate and legal considerations

Private wells aren’t regulated like public systems, so responsibility typically lies with the homeowner. For real estate transactions, require a recent lab report and, if contaminants are high, stipulate remediation or price adjustments.

Chain-of-custody and certified labs

For legal or real estate matters, use a certified lab and a chain-of-custody form to ensure sample integrity and defensible results for lenders and sellers.

Frequently asked questions (short answers)

  • What tests should I run annually? At minimum: total coliform/E. coli, nitrate, pH, hardness, iron, and TDS.
  • How long do I wait for lab results? Most labs return bacteria results within 24–48 hours and full chemical panels in several days.
  • Can I disinfect my well myself? You can perform a shock chlorination following detailed instructions, but hire a pro if structural issues or repeated contamination occur.
  • Will a water softener remove arsenic or nitrate? No — softeners address hardness; arsenic and nitrate require specialized systems like RO or ion exchange.

Final checklist: what to do now

  • Test annually for coliform bacteria and nitrate; test a full baseline panel when you move in or before buying.
  • Use a state-certified lab for health-related tests, and follow sampling instructions carefully.
  • If bacteria are detected, stop using water for drinking and disinfect the well; retest to confirm safety.
  • If chemicals exceed EPA guidance, use alternative water for drinking, consult a professional, and install appropriate treatment.
  • Maintain the well structure, keep contaminants (fertilizers, livestock, chemicals) away from the wellhead, and document all tests and treatments.

You don’t have to be an expert to keep your well water safe, but regular testing and prompt action when results are out of range will protect you and your family. If you need a tailored testing schedule, recommended labs in your state, or help interpreting a specific lab result, let me know the contaminant values and I’ll help you interpret them and suggest next steps.