Kingman Municipal Water
No action needed for most people
Naturally occurring lithium — no federal limit
Lithium occurs naturally in groundwater. It's the same element used in psychiatric medication, but at concentrations thousands of times lower than a therapeutic dose.
Should I be concerned?
For most people, no. There is no federal drinking water limit for lithium.
No action needed
Minor violations on record, all resolved
Health-based violations occurred in the past but have since been resolved. The system is currently compliant.
Should I be concerned?
No. Historic violations are common in water systems of all sizes. What matters is whether they are resolved — these are.
No action needed
No PFAS detected in this water system
PFAS was monitored under EPA's UCMR5 program (2023–2025) and not detected.
Should I be concerned?
No. This contaminant is monitored and not detected.
No action needed
Not detected in this water system
Chromium-6 is the contaminant from the Erin Brockovich case — it's not present in detectable amounts here.
Should I be concerned?
No. This contaminant is monitored and not detected.
Check your home's pipes
Lead risk depends on your home, not just the water system
The concern isn't usually the treatment plant — it's pipes inside older homes. No level is considered safe for children under 6.
Should I be worried?
Not necessarily — but if your home was built before 1986, it's worth checking whether you have lead pipes or solder. Run cold water 30 seconds before drinking in the morning.
We don't have annual water report data for KINGMAN MUNICIPAL WATER yet. If you can find the PDF, we'll analyze it and add it to this page.
Do you have or use a private well? Measured concentrations from nearby private wells sampled within 5 miles.
Kingman pumps water from 16 groundwater wells drawing from the Basin and Range basin-fill aquifers.