Tempe Water Quality

Arizona

Health Violations

The tap water in Tempe, Arizona is served by 5 EPA-regulated water systems covering approximately 167,062 people. 4 health-based violations are on record, most recently for 5200 in 2025. Data source: EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System.

5
Water Systems
167,062
Population Served
4
Total Violations
4
Health-Based Violations

Drinking water in Tempe, Arizona is delivered through 5 EPA-regulated community water systems serving an estimated 167,062 people. Each system is tracked in the EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) under the Safe Drinking Water Act, which requires testing for regulated contaminants, consumer notification of violations, and publication of an annual Consumer Confidence Report.

The SDWIS record for Tempe shows 4 total violations across all 5 systems, of which 4 are health-based, meaning either a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) was exceeded or a required treatment technique was not followed. Contaminants cited in health-based violations include 5200, 0800, 2950. 17 TRI-reporting industrial facilityies are also located within the city limits.

A past EPA violation does not mean the water is currently unsafe, utilities are required to notify customers and remediate under state primacy oversight. For current water-quality status and treatment practices, review your local utility's most recent Consumer Confidence Report or contact the Arizona drinking water program. All records above reflect federal EPA SDWIS data and are not independently verified against state databases.

Community Water Systems

System Name Pop. Served Violations Status
TEMPE CITY OF 165,000 2 Health
BERNEIL WATER COMPANY 1,388 0 Clean
PICACHO PEAK RV RESORT 400 1 Health
ADVANCE MHP 175 1 Health
SIGNAL PEAK WATER COMPANY 99 0 Clean

Does this city have health-based water violations?

Health-based violations indicate contaminant levels that exceeded EPA maximum contaminant levels (MCLs). This does not necessarily mean water is currently unsafe.

Contaminant Begin Date
5200 2025-07-02
5200 2024-10-17
0800 2017-10-01
2950 2017-04-01

TRI Facilities in Tempe

Facility Total Releases
United Dairymen of Arizona 408.0K lbs
Gold Tech Industries - Aerospace/telecommunications Division 52.3K lbs
Schreiber Foods Inc 49.0K lbs
Me Global Inc. 17.1K lbs
Microchip Technology Inc. 9.2K lbs
Safeway Tempe Milk Plant 6.4K lbs
Acme Aerospace Inc 2.8K lbs
Honeywell Tempe 1.9K lbs
Agc Multi Material America Inc. 1.3K lbs
L3HARRIS Technologies Inc 937 lbs

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Tempe, Arizona water safe to drink?
Tempe is served by 5 EPA-regulated water systems covering approximately 167,062 people. 4 health-based violations have been recorded. A past violation does not necessarily mean water is currently unsafe, systems are required to notify customers and resolve issues. Contact your local water utility for current status.
How many water violations does Tempe have?
Tempe water systems have a total of 4 violations on record in the EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System, of which 4 are health-based (MCL exceedances). The remaining violations are monitoring or reporting violations.
What contaminants were found in Tempe water?
Health-based violations for Tempe water systems include the following contaminants: 5200, 0800, 2950. Source: EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS).
How many water systems serve Tempe?
5 EPA-regulated community water systems serve Tempe, Arizona, collectively covering approximately 167,062 people. Data is from the EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS).
Where does Tempe get its drinking water?
Tempe's water supply comes from 5 EPA-regulated community water systems. Source type data is not available for all systems. For detailed supply information, contact your local water utility. Source: EPA SDWIS.
Are there pollution sources near Tempe?
Yes, 17 EPA Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) facilities are registered in Tempe, Arizona, reporting a combined 549.8K lbs of toxic chemical releases. TRI data reflects self-reported emissions; it does not measure exposure or health effects. Source: EPA TRI.

About This Data

Water system data comes from the EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS). Violations are reported by state agencies to EPA and include both health-based (MCL exceedances) and monitoring/reporting violations.

A reported violation does not necessarily mean water is currently unsafe to drink. Many violations are resolved quickly, and public water systems are required to notify customers of significant issues. For current water quality, contact your local water utility.

TRI facility data comes from the EPA Toxic Release Inventory. Facilities shown are those that self-report to the TRI program. PlainEnviro presents this data without advocacy framing.

Related

Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainEnviro Editorial