Benchmark Condominiums

Tyngsborough, MA · serves 60 · GroundwaterMA3301008
All clear
All monitored contaminants within federal limits. Last updated from the most recent CCR and EPA monitoring data available.
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Measured in your 2025 water report
From your utility's Consumer Confidence Report · 95 contaminants tested
Above limit
Approaching limit
Within limits
Regulated contaminants — legally enforceable limits
Nitrate (as N)
2.04 mg/L
MCLlegally enforceable
What is it?
Comes from fertilizer runoff, septic systems, and erosion of natural deposits. One of the most common groundwater contaminants in agricultural areas.
Why it matters
Nitrate above 10 mg/L can cause "blue baby syndrome" (methemoglobinemia) in infants under 6 months — it interferes with blood's ability to carry oxygen. Adults can tolerate higher levels.
What to do
If you have an infant on formula and your water is above 5 mg/L, consider using bottled water for formula preparation. Boiling water does NOT remove nitrate — it concentrates it.
What the research says
Multiple peer-reviewed studies have found neural tube defects, preterm birth, and low birth weight at concentrations as low as 5 mg/L2x below the US federal limit.
Perchlorate
0.12 µg/L
CA notificationCalifornia advisory
No additional information available for this contaminant.
Lead & copper — tested at your tap
Copper
0.01 mg/L
Action levellegally enforceable
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.
PFAS
PFOA
1.41 ng/L
MCLlegally enforceable
What is it?
Perfluorooctanoic acid — a "forever chemical" used in non-stick coatings, stain repellents, and firefighting foam. It doesn't break down in the environment or your body.
Why it matters
The EPA set an MCL of 4 ng/L (parts per trillion) in 2024 — one of the strictest drinking water standards ever set. PFOA is linked to cancer, thyroid disease, immune system effects, and reproductive harm.
What to do
A reverse osmosis filter (NSF/ANSI 58) or activated carbon filter (NSF/ANSI 53 certified for PFOA) can reduce levels by 90%+. Pitcher filters with activated carbon provide partial reduction. Utilities have until 2029 to comply with the new MCL.
What the research says
Multiple peer-reviewed studies have found preeclampsia, low birth weight, and immunotoxicity in infants with a dose-response relationship across the range of concentrations found in drinking water.
PFBS
1.12 ng/L
MCLlegally enforceable
What is it?
Perfluorobutane sulfonic acid — a short-chain PFAS compound. Part of the EPA's Hazard Index approach for PFAS mixtures.
Why it matters
Regulated as part of the PFAS mixture Hazard Index, not as a standalone MCL. Short-chain PFAS are harder to remove from water but are excreted from the body faster than long-chain PFAS.
What to do
Reverse osmosis is the most effective removal method for short-chain PFAS.
PFHpA
0.909 ng/L
No additional information available for this contaminant.
PFHxA
2.3 ng/L
No additional information available for this contaminant.
% of limit

Other measurements

These describe characteristics of the water that aren’t health risks at typical levels — mineral content, taste, hardness, and similar.

Hardness
76 mg/L· moderately hard
pH
7.76 SU· slightly basic
Alkalinity
72 mg/L
Calcium
24 mg/L
Chloride
8.9 mg/L
(EPA secondary standard: 250 mg/L)
Magnesium
3.9 mg/L
Potassium
5.2 mg/L
Sulfate
13.8 mg/L
(EPA secondary standard: 250 mg/L)
TDS
130 mg/L
(EPA secondary standard: 500 mg/L)
Zinc
0.096 mg/L
(EPA secondary standard: 5 mg/L)

CCR data in early access — values are extracted from utility PDFs and may contain errors. Verify with your utility's 2025 CCR report.

Source: BENCHMARK CONDOMINIUMS Consumer Confidence Report 2025 · Extracted by WaterScore
4 wells
Water Sources

Tyngsborough pumps water from four groundwater wells drawing from local groundwater. Emergency backup sources are available if primary supplies are disrupted.

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