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Phoenix Water Quality Report

What Phoenix homeowners should know about their water.

Phoenix municipal water meets federal and state drinking water standards, but local homeowners still deal with very hard water, mineral scale, chlorine taste, high dissolved solids, and appliance wear.

Is Phoenix tap water safe?

According to the City of Phoenix's 2025 Water Quality Report, Phoenix drinking water met or surpassed all federal and state drinking water standards. That does not mean every homeowner loves the way it tastes, smells, or behaves inside the home.

Safe does not always mean ideal

Water can meet legal standards while still having chlorine taste, high mineral content, and hardness that affects fixtures, glassware, plumbing, and appliances.

Multiple desert water sources

Phoenix water comes from surface water sources including the Salt River Project and Central Arizona Project, plus groundwater supplies when needed.

Testing is extensive

The City of Phoenix monitors regulated contaminants and aesthetic water-quality factors, including hardness, TDS, pH, sodium, and other water characteristics.

The big Phoenix water issue: hardness.

Hard water is caused primarily by calcium and magnesium. In Phoenix, those minerals are naturally present in the region's desert water sources and local geology.

With reported hardness ranging from 10 to 17.6 grains per gallon, Phoenix water is hard to very hard. This is the kind of water that can leave spots on glassware, white crust around faucets, scale in water heaters, and buildup inside plumbing fixtures.

That is why many homeowners notice the symptoms long before they ever read a water quality report.

What homeowners noticeLikely causeWhy it matters
White crust on faucets and showerheadsHardness mineralsScale can build up on surfaces and fixtures.
Spots on dishes and glassCalcium and magnesium depositsDishes may look dirty even after washing.
Dry-feeling skin and dull hairHard water interacting with soapsSoap may not rinse as cleanly.
Reduced water heater efficiencyScale inside heating equipmentScale can make appliances work harder over time.
Chlorine taste or smellDisinfection residualCommon aesthetic complaint with municipal water.

Key Phoenix water quality numbers

These figures are based on public City of Phoenix reporting. Your exact home water quality can vary by neighborhood, plumbing, water heater condition, and point-of-use fixtures.

Water quality factorReported levelHomeowner impact
Total hardness172-302 ppm / about 10-17.6 grains per gallonHard to very hard water; common source of scale buildup and spotting.
Total dissolved solids464-716 ppmCan affect taste and contribute to mineral deposits.
pH6.6-8.8A measure of acidity/alkalinity that can vary across the distribution system.
Sodium91-183 ppmOne contributor to overall dissolved mineral content and taste.
Source waterSalt River Project, Central Arizona Project, and groundwater sourcesMineral-rich desert water sources are a major reason Phoenix homes experience hard water symptoms.
Compliance statusMeets or surpasses federal and state drinking water standardsLegally compliant water may still benefit from filtration and conditioning for comfort, taste, and scale control.

What Puragain recommends for Phoenix homes

For Phoenix homeowners, the most complete approach is usually a whole-home filtration and conditioning system paired with a dedicated reverse osmosis drinking water system.

Whole home: Helps address chlorine taste and odor while conditioning hardness minerals to reduce scale problems throughout the home.

Kitchen sink: A 6-stage alkaline reverse osmosis system provides high-quality drinking and cooking water.

Get a Free In-Home Water Test

Test your water at the home

Public reports are useful, but an in-home water test shows what is actually coming out of your taps.

Protect the entire house

A whole-home system treats water before it reaches showers, laundry, appliances, fixtures, and plumbing.

Upgrade drinking water separately

For drinking and cooking, reverse osmosis provides an additional level of treatment at the kitchen sink.

Phoenix water quality FAQs

Clear answers for the questions homeowners ask most often.

Is Phoenix water hard?

Yes. The City of Phoenix's 2025 Water Quality Report lists total hardness from 172 to 302 ppm, equal to about 10 to 17.6 grains per gallon. That ranges from hard to very hard water and can contribute to scale, spots, and buildup.

Why does Phoenix water taste like chlorine?

Chlorine is commonly used as a disinfectant to help protect drinking water as it travels through the municipal distribution system. Many homeowners choose filtration to improve taste and odor.

Will a basic carbon pitcher remove hardness?

No. Basic carbon filters may improve some taste and odor concerns, but they are not designed to remove hardness minerals such as calcium and magnesium.

Do I need a water softener in Phoenix?

You need a scale-control strategy. Traditional salt softeners use ion exchange, salt, and regeneration. Puragain's approach uses whole-home filtration and salt-free conditioning to help protect the home without salt bags, brine discharge, or wasted regeneration water.

What is the best water filter for Phoenix?

For many homes, the best setup is not one filter. It is a whole-home filtration and conditioning system for the entire house plus reverse osmosis drinking water at the kitchen sink.

Sources

This homeowner guide summarizes public water-quality information and is not a substitute for an in-home water test.

  • City of Phoenix — 2025 Water Quality Report: https://www.phoenix.gov/content/dam/phoenix/waterservicessite/documents/wsdprimarywqr.pdf
  • City of Phoenix — Water Services Department: https://www.phoenix.gov/waterservices
  • U.S. EPA — Drinking Water Regulations: https://www.epa.gov/dwreginfo/drinking-water-regulations
  • U.S. Geological Survey — Water Hardness: https://www.usgs.gov/special-topics/water-science-school/science/hardness-water
  • Environmental Working Group Tap Water Database — Phoenix: https://www.ewg.org/tapwater/