No PFAS detected, no health violations, and no significant lead risk on record.
APFAS
BLead
AViolations
AChromium-6
ALithium
DDrought
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B
Lead
No action needed
Low lead service line risk
5.7% lead service lines
ALL CLEAR▾
A
PFAS
No action needed
No PFAS detected in this water system
not detected
ALL CLEAR▾
A
Violations
No action needed
No health violations on record
ALL CLEAR▾
A
Chromium-6
No action needed
Not detected in this water system
not detected
ALL CLEAR▾
A
Lithium
Lithium not detected in this system
Not detected in this water system
not detected
ALL CLEAR▾
D
Drought
No near-term action needed
Significant stress on this system's water supply
FYI▾
Measured in your 2024 water report
From your utility's Consumer Confidence Report · 2 contaminants tested
Above limit
Approaching limit
Within limits
Limit
Lead▸
0.0011 mg/L
What is it?
Lead in drinking water almost always comes from your home's plumbing — not from the water source or treatment plant. Lead pipes, solder, and brass fixtures can leach lead, especially if water sits in pipes for hours.
Why it matters
There is no safe level of lead exposure. Even low levels can harm children's brain development, and cause kidney and blood pressure problems in adults. The action level of 15 µg/L is a regulatory trigger, not a safety threshold.
What to do
Run your tap for 30 seconds to 2 minutes before drinking, especially in the morning. Use cold water for cooking and formula — hot water leaches more lead. A filter certified to NSF/ANSI 53 for lead removal is the most reliable protection.
Copper▸
0.0658 mg/L
What is it?
Leaches from copper household plumbing and pipes. Some copper is a normal part of drinking water infrastructure.
Why it matters
Short-term exposure above the action level of 1.3 mg/L can cause gastrointestinal distress. Long-term exposure can cause liver and kidney damage. At typical detected levels (well below the AL), copper is not a health concern.
What to do
If above the action level, run your tap for 30 seconds before drinking. Copper levels decrease as water flows through the pipes.
Source: CENTRAL ARKANSAS WATER Consumer Confidence Report 2024 · Extracted by WaterScore · Confidence: raw
Model estimates
Private Well Risk
Do you have or use a private well? Estimated contamination risk for wells in this area based on local geology and land use.
Details ↓
Surface water
Water Sources
Little Rock draws from surface water — Lake Winona, Jackson Reservior, and Lake Maumelle. Drought directly affects reservoir levels and river flow. ⚠️ This region is currently under severe drought conditions — reservoir and river levels may be reduced.