State 48 Water · East Valley, Arizona
Know What's
In Your Water.
In Your Water.
We've reviewed the official 2024 Consumer Confidence Reports for every city we serve. The results may surprise you. Select your city below to see exactly what's in your water — and what to do about it.
7
Cities analyzed
2024
Official CCR data
4
Cities with PFAS concerns
11–22+
Grains per gallon (avg hardness)
Why this matters in 2024: PFAS ("forever chemicals") have been detected or formally disclosed in Gilbert, Apache Junction, San Tan Valley, and Florence water supplies. New EPA maximum contaminant levels took effect in 2024 — water systems have until 2029 to comply, but your family's exposure starts now.
Select your city
Gilbert
ARIZONA
→
PFAS detected
Chromium-6
Arsenic
11–13 GPG
PURE tier recommended
PFAS ALERT
Queen Creek
ARIZONA
→
Hard water
Chlorine & DBPs
~12 GPG
CLEAN tier recommended
San Tan Valley
ARIZONA
→
Elevated arsenic
Groundwater
12–16 GPG
PURE tier recommended
Mesa
ARIZONA
→
Variable hardness
Chromium-6
12–22 GPG
CLEAN tier recommended
Chandler
ARIZONA
→
Variable hardness
DBPs
8–23 GPG
CLEAN tier recommended
Apache Junction
ARIZONA
→
PFAS disclosed
Arsenic
Nitrates
14–18 GPG
PURE tier recommended
PFAS ALERT
Florence
ARIZONA
→
PFAS monitored
Arsenic
Groundwater
14–18 GPG
PURE tier recommended
PFAS ALERT
Why get a water report
85%
Hard Water Nation
85% of U.S. homes have hard water. East Valley cities range from hard to extremely hard — silently damaging appliances and shortening their lifespan every day.
20yr
Outdated Legal Limits
EPA legal contaminant limits haven't been updated in nearly 20 years. Water that "passes" legally can still exceed modern health guidelines — your CCR tells you both numbers.
2029
PFAS Deadline
Water utilities have until 2029 to comply with new federal PFAS limits. Your household doesn't have to wait — reverse osmosis removes PFAS at the tap today.
Not sure where to start?
(602) 730-0262 · blake@state48water.com · ROC# 346721
All water quality data sourced from official 2024 Consumer Confidence Reports (CCRs) published by each municipality or water utility. Data is for informational purposes only. Contaminant levels meet all applicable federal and state legal standards unless otherwise noted.

