Status: Reviewed educational snapshot. Verify your exact utility/address before making decisions. Generated: 2026-05-21T20:32:21+00:00
What to check first
A ZIP code is a starting point, not a precise utility boundary. Public water reports can help identify likely questions to ask, but they cannot prove conditions at a specific faucet.
Recommended next step
Start with testing or official utility/state reports, then choose a treatment category based on the actual concern: test kit, reverse osmosis, whole-house filtration, softener, UV, or another targeted system.
Sources checked
- official_city_county_site (official_city_county_site)
- Denver Water water quality reports / CCR page (official_utility_ccr_page)
- Denver Water 2025 Water Quality Report PDF (official_utility_ccr_pdf)
- CDPHE PFAS (official_state_pfas)
- CDPHE Lead in drinking water (official_state_lead)
- EPA ECHO Detailed Facility Report - CO0116001 (epa_echo)
Important limitation: This is an educational snapshot based on public sources and your form responses. It is not a lab test and cannot determine whether the water at your specific faucet is safe. For health-sensitive decisions, use certified lab testing and official utility/state guidance.
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