San Antonio, Texas Tap Water Quality Report (2026)

By Echo Water Research Team 5 min read
San Antonio, Texas Tap Water Quality Report (2026)

San Antonio, Texas Tap Water Quality Report

Serving utility: San Antonio Water System

Updated March 2026 • Data from EWG Tap Water Database & EPA SDWIS

38
Contaminants Detected
15
Above EWG Guidelines
1,999,472
People Served

High Priority Concerns

San Antonio tap water has 15 contaminants exceeding EWG health guidelines, including Haloacetic acids (HAA9), Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs), Bromochloroacetic acid. Additionally, 14 known or suspected carcinogens were detected, including Haloacetic acids (HAA9), Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs), Bromodichloromethane.

Water Provider Information

Provider
San Antonio Water System
Location
San Antonio, TX
Population Served
1,999,472
Data Sources
EWG, EPA SDWIS
How does San Antonio compare? See where it ranks in our Texas state rankings and national report.

Contaminants Detected

Contaminant Detected Level EWG Guideline Legal Limit Status
Haloacetic acids (HAA9) carcinogen 9.67 ppb 0.06 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs) carcinogen 22.90 ppb 0.15 ppb 80 ppb Above guideline
Bromochloroacetic acid 2.12 ppb 0.02 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Dibromoacetic acid 2.41 ppb 0.03 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Bromodichloromethane carcinogen 4.42 ppb 0.06 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Haloacetic acids (HAA5) carcinogen 5.76 ppb 0.10 ppb 60 ppb Above guideline
Dibromochloromethane carcinogen 5.55 ppb 0.10 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Nitrate and nitrite carcinogen 2.01 ppm 0.14 ppm 10 ppm Above guideline
Dichloroacetic acid carcinogen 2.05 ppb 0.20 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Nitrate carcinogen 1.42 ppm 0.14 ppm 10 ppm Above guideline
Chloroform carcinogen 2.82 ppb 0.40 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Chromium (hexavalent) carcinogen 0.14 ppb 0.02 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Radium, combined (-226 and -228) 0.34 pCi/L 0.05 pCi/L 5 pCi/L Above guideline
Bromoform carcinogen 2.95 ppb 0.50 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
Trichloroacetic acid carcinogen 0.43 ppb 0.10 ppb No legal limit Above guideline
1,4-Dioxane carcinogen 0.01 ppb 0.35 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
2-methyl-1-propene 5 ppb N/A No legal limit Below guideline
Barium 62 ppb 700 ppb 2,000 ppb Below guideline
Chlorate 6.27 ppb 210 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Chromium (total) 0.24 ppb N/A 100 ppb Below guideline
Cobalt 0.01 ppb 70 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Fluoride 0.43 ppm N/A 4 ppm Below guideline
Hexadecanoic acid 3.91 ppb N/A No legal limit Below guideline
Lithium 9.45 ppb N/A No legal limit Below guideline
Manganese 0.30 ppb 100 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Molybdenum 1.04 ppb 40 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Monobromoacetic acid 0.03 ppb 25 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Monochloroacetic acid 0.09 ppb 53 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Octadecanoic acid 6.15 ppb N/A No legal limit Below guideline
Perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS) 0.09 ppt 2,000 ppt No legal limit Below guideline
Perfluorobutanoic Acid (PFBA) 0.54 ppt 1,000 ppt No legal limit Below guideline
Perfluoropentanoic Acid (PFPeA) 0.08 ppt 1,000 ppt No legal limit Below guideline
Selenium 0.10 ppb 30 ppb 50 ppb Below guideline
Strontium 0.81 ppb 1,500 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Thallium 0.05 ppb 0.10 ppb 2 ppb Below guideline
Uranium carcinogen 0.14 pCi/L 0.43 pCi/L 20 pCi/L Below guideline
Vanadium 2.72 ppb 21 ppb No legal limit Below guideline
Xylenes (total) 0.01 ppb 1,800 ppb 10,000 ppb Below guideline

Health Context

Haloacetic acids (HAA9) carcinogen

Exposure to elevated levels of this contaminant may pose health risks. See EWG and EPA guidelines for more information.

Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs) carcinogen

Exposure to elevated levels of this contaminant may pose health risks. See EWG and EPA guidelines for more information.

Bromochloroacetic acid

Exposure to elevated levels of this contaminant may pose health risks. See EWG and EPA guidelines for more information.

Dibromoacetic acid

Exposure to elevated levels of this contaminant may pose health risks. See EWG and EPA guidelines for more information.

Bromodichloromethane carcinogen

Bromodichloromethane is a trihalomethane (THM) disinfection byproduct that damages liver and kidneys with chronic exposure. EPA classifies it as a probable human carcinogen based on animal carcinogenicity data.

liver cirrhosiskidney diseasehepatocellular carcinomabladder cancercolon cancer

Recommended Filtration for This Water

Echo RO System

Reverse osmosis filtration removes up to 99.9% of contaminants including heavy metals, PFAS, disinfection byproducts, and more. The gold standard for drinking water purification.

View RO Systems

Echo Whole-Home Filter

Filters water at every tap in your home. Reduces chlorine, VOCs, and disinfection byproducts from your shower, bath, and kitchen water.

View Whole-Home Filters

Echo Hydrogen Water Flask

Once your water is clean, supercharge it. Molecular hydrogen is the smallest, most bioavailable antioxidant — shown to reduce inflammation, boost energy, and support cellular health.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is San Antonio tap water safe to drink?

San Antonio tap water meets EPA legal standards for drinking water. However, 15 contaminants exceed stricter EWG health guidelines, and 14 known carcinogens were detected. While legally compliant, additional filtration is recommended for optimal safety.

What contaminants are in San Antonio water?

A total of 38 contaminants were detected in San Antonio tap water, including Haloacetic acids (HAA9), Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs). Of these, 15 exceed EWG health guidelines.

What's the best water filter for San Antonio?

For San Antonio tap water, we recommend a reverse osmosis (RO) system for drinking water — it removes up to 99.9% of contaminants including heavy metals, PFAS, and disinfection byproducts. For shower and bath water, a whole-home filtration system reduces chlorine and volatile organics.

Where does San Antonio get its water?

San Antonio tap water is provided by San Antonio Water System, serving approximately 1,999,472 people. For detailed source water information, contact your local utility or visit the EPA's SDWIS database.

Data sources: Environmental Working Group (EWG) Tap Water Database, U.S. EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS)

Last updated: March 2026

Methodology: Contaminant levels are compared against both EPA legal limits (Maximum Contaminant Levels) and EWG health guidelines, which are often stricter and based on the latest scientific research.

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