Lead in Drinking Water: Complete Guide
Lead is one of the most dangerous water contaminants with no safe level. Learn about health effects, how lead enters water, testing methods, and removal solutions.
What is Lead?
Lead is a toxic heavy metal that can cause serious health problems even at very low levels. While it occurs naturally in the earth's crust, lead in drinking water primarily comes from corrosion of lead pipes, faucets, and fixtures in homes and buildings.
Lead is particularly dangerous because it accumulates in the body over time and is especially harmful to children, whose growing bodies absorb lead more easily. There is no safe level of lead exposure, according to the CDC and EPA.
Critical: Lead cannot be seen, tasted, or smelled in water. The only way to know if your water contains lead is to have it tested.
Health Effects of Lead Exposure
Short-Term Effects
- •Abdominal pain and cramping
- •Fatigue and weakness
- •Headaches and memory problems
- •Irritability and mood changes
- •Loss of appetite
Long-Term Effects
- •Permanent brain damage in children
- •Reduced IQ and learning disabilities
- •Kidney damage and failure
- •High blood pressure and heart disease
- •Reduced fertility and pregnancy complications
Vulnerable Populations
Children under 6: Most vulnerable. Lead can cause permanent learning disabilities, behavioral problems, and developmental delays.
Pregnant women: Lead can cross the placenta and harm fetal brain development.
Adults over 60: More susceptible to cardiovascular and kidney effects.
EPA Regulatory Limits
Action Level: 15 ppb
If lead levels exceed 15 parts per billion in more than 10% of tested homes, water systems must take action to control corrosion. This is NOT a safety threshold - there is no safe level of lead.
Note: Unlike most contaminants, lead has an "Action Level" rather than an MCL because lead contamination typically occurs in home plumbing, not at the treatment plant.
MCLG: 0 ppb
The EPA's Maximum Contaminant Level Goal for lead is zero because no level of lead exposure is considered safe, especially for children.
CDC Blood Lead Reference: 3.5 µg/dL
The CDC uses this blood lead reference value to identify children with elevated lead levels who require case management. Even lower levels can cause harm.
How Lead Gets Into Drinking Water
1. Lead Service Lines
The pipe connecting the water main to your home may be made of lead. An estimated 6-10 million homes in the U.S. still have lead service lines, particularly in older cities.
2. Lead Plumbing and Fixtures
Homes built before 1986 may have lead pipes, faucets, or fixtures. Even "lead-free" brass fixtures can contain up to 8% lead and may leach into water.
3. Lead Solder
Lead solder was commonly used to join copper pipes until 1986. Older solder joints can corrode and release lead into water.
4. Water Chemistry
Corrosive water (low pH, low mineral content) dissolves lead from pipes faster. Water that sits in pipes for several hours has higher lead levels.
High-Risk Geographic Areas
Lead contamination is primarily a problem in older cities with aging infrastructure. Cities with the highest concentration of lead service lines include:
Chicago, IL
Est. 400,000+ lead service lines
Detroit, MI
Est. 125,000 lead service lines
Cleveland, OH
Est. 80,000 lead service lines
Milwaukee, WI
Est. 70,000 lead service lines
Newark, NJ
Major lead crisis 2018-2021
Flint, MI
Historic water crisis 2014-2019
Risk Factors: Homes built before 1986, cities with older infrastructure, areas with corrosive water, recent plumbing work that disturbed old pipes.
How to Test for Lead in Water
1. Home Test Kits ($15-40)
Available at hardware stores and online. Collect water sample according to instructions (usually first-draw water after 6+ hours of no use).
Pros: Inexpensive, quick results. Cons: Less accurate than lab testing.
2. Certified Lab Testing ($50-150)
Most accurate method. Contact a state-certified laboratory or use EPA's Safe Drinking Water Hotline (800-426-4791) to find certified labs.
Testing protocol: Collect first-draw sample after water sits in pipes 6+ hours. Some labs recommend testing multiple samples.
3. Free Testing Programs
Many water utilities offer free lead testing, especially in high-risk areas. Contact your water provider to inquire about testing programs.
Testing Tips:
- • Test water that has sat in pipes for 6+ hours (morning first-draw)
- • Test multiple faucets if possible
- • Test after any plumbing work that could disturb pipes
- • Test periodically if you have old plumbing
How to Remove Lead from Water
Most Effective: Reverse Osmosis
Removes 95-99% of lead. Point-of-use systems (under-sink) provide filtered water at one tap.
Cost: $200-500 for system + $50-100/year maintenance
Certified Lead-Removal Filters
Look for NSF/ANSI Standard 53 certification for lead removal. Includes pitcher filters, faucet-mount filters, and refrigerator filters.
Cost: $20-150 for system + $20-80/year for replacement filters
Distillation
Boils water and collects steam, leaving lead behind. Removes 99%+ of lead but slow and energy-intensive.
Cost: $100-300 for countertop unit
Does NOT Remove Lead:
- • Boiling water (concentrates lead)
- • Basic carbon filters without NSF 53 certification
- • Water softeners
- • UV disinfection systems
DIY vs. Professional Solutions
DIY Solutions
Flush Pipes
Run cold water for 1-2 minutes before use if water has sat in pipes for 6+ hours. This reduces lead but doesn't eliminate it.
Use Cold Water
Hot water dissolves lead faster. Only use cold water for drinking and cooking.
Install Certified Filters
Pitcher filters or faucet-mount filters certified for lead removal provide immediate protection.
Professional Solutions
Full Lead Service Line Replacement
The only permanent solution. Replace entire lead service line from street to home.
Cost: $3,000-10,000 (often subsidized by utilities)
Whole-Home Filtration
Point-of-entry systems filter all water entering your home.
Cost: $1,500-5,000 + installation
Replace Lead Plumbing Fixtures
Replace old faucets, valves, and fixtures containing lead.
Cost: $200-1,000 per fixture + labor
Prevention and Risk Reduction
Test Your Water
Get your water tested, especially if you have children or live in an older home.
Identify Lead Pipes
Check if you have a lead service line (pipe is dull gray and soft enough to scratch with a key). Contact your water utility for records.
Use Lead-Free Materials
When doing plumbing work, use certified lead-free pipes and fixtures.
Install Certified Filters
Use NSF 53-certified filters and replace cartridges as recommended.
Advocate for Infrastructure Upgrades
Support local efforts to replace lead service lines and upgrade water systems.
Latest Research and Developments
EPA Lead and Copper Rule Improvements (2024)
The EPA finalized updates requiring water systems to replace all lead service lines within 10 years, down from the previous requirement to replace only lines causing exceedances.
Lower Action Level Proposed
Health advocates continue pushing for a lower action level (10 ppb or less) to better protect children's health.
Infrastructure Bill Funding
The 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act allocated $15 billion specifically for lead service line replacement nationwide.
No Safe Level Confirmed
Recent studies continue to find cognitive impacts at blood lead levels previously thought safe, reinforcing that no level of lead exposure is without risk.
Regulatory History
Frequently Asked Questions
Does boiling water remove lead?
No. Boiling actually concentrates lead and makes the problem worse. Only filtration, reverse osmosis, or distillation can remove lead.
How long does it take for lead to leave the body?
Lead has a half-life of about 1 month in blood but can remain in bones for decades. Reducing exposure allows blood levels to decrease, but complete elimination takes years.
Can I tell if my water has lead just by looking at it?
No. Lead is completely invisible, tasteless, and odorless. The only way to know is through testing.
Should I replace my lead service line partially or fully?
Always replace the full line. Partial replacement can temporarily increase lead levels by disturbing pipe scale. Full replacement is the only permanent solution.
Is bottled water safer than tap water with lead?
Bottled water doesn't contain lead from pipes, but it's expensive and environmentally harmful. A certified filter on your tap water is usually the best solution.
How often should I test my water for lead?
Test when you move into a new home, after any plumbing work, and every 1-2 years if you have old plumbing. If you have a lead service line, test annually.
Check Lead Levels in Your City
See how your city's water quality compares and check for lead violations in your area.