July 06, 2026

Arsenic in Drinking Water: Is Your Home at Risk?

By Pure Water Guys

Arsenic in Drinking Water: Is Your Home at Risk? - PureWaterGuys.com

Arsenic is naturally present in rock formations across large parts of the United States — and it leaches silently into groundwater with no color, no taste, and no odor. Long-term exposure is linked to bladder, kidney, and skin cancers. Here's how to find out if your home is at risk and what to do about it.

Person holding a glass of water — reverse osmosis systems remove up to 95% of arsenic from drinking water and are the most effective home filtration option

Where Does Arsenic Come From?

Arsenic occurs naturally in geological formations and is released into groundwater as rock weathers over time. Volcanic and sedimentary rock types are particularly arsenic-rich, and the aquifers overlying them can carry significant concentrations. Human activities that elevate arsenic include mining, smelting, and the historical use of arsenic-based pesticides in agriculture.

Geographic hotspots in the U.S. include:

  • Southwest — Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico (including Phoenix metro)
  • Mountain West — Wyoming, Montana, Idaho
  • New England — Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont
  • Upper Midwest — Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota
  • Central Valley, California
Phoenix and Southwest Residents

Arizona has some of the highest naturally occurring arsenic concentrations in the country. Phoenix metro municipal water is treated for arsenic, but levels are worth verifying in your annual CCR. Well owners in the Southwest: arsenic testing is essential, not optional.

Health Risks of Arsenic Exposure

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies arsenic as a Group 1 human carcinogen — the highest classification, meaning sufficient evidence exists for carcinogenicity in humans. Long-term exposure to arsenic in drinking water is associated with:

  • Bladder cancer (strongest association in the literature)
  • Lung and skin cancer
  • Characteristic skin lesions (keratosis)
  • Kidney cancer
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Type 2 diabetes (emerging evidence)
  • Developmental effects in children

The EPA's current maximum contaminant level is 10 ppb (parts per billion). Critically, the EPA's own non-enforceable MCLG is 0 ppb — acknowledging there is no known safe level of arsenic exposure. Some states enforce stricter limits: New Jersey's MCL is 5 ppb.

How to Find Out If Your Water Has Arsenic

What Removes Arsenic from Drinking Water

Arsenic exists in two primary forms: arsenite (As III) and arsenate (As V). Most home treatment systems target arsenate more effectively. Pre-oxidation (converting As III to As V) improves removal efficiency for some technologies.

Treatment Technology Arsenic Removal Notes
Reverse Osmosis (RO) 85–95% (As V); 50–70% (As III) Most common residential solution; NSF/ANSI 58
Activated Alumina 90%+ Specialty media; highly effective for arsenic specifically
Iron Oxide / Greensand Media 90%+ Used in whole-house point-of-entry applications
Distillation 99%+ Highly effective; high operating cost
Standard carbon filter Minimal Not designed for arsenic removal
Boiling water None — worsens it Concentrates arsenic as water evaporates

For most homeowners, an NSF/ANSI 58 certified under-sink reverse osmosis system is the most practical and cost-effective solution for arsenic in drinking and cooking water. Browse our arsenic filter options for a full range of treatment approaches.

Test First, Filter Second

Arsenic removal efficiency depends on which form is present (As III vs. As V) and the baseline concentration. If your level is above 5 ppb, work with a water treatment professional to select the right system and test the filtered output after installation to confirm performance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does boiling water remove arsenic?

No — boiling concentrates arsenic by evaporating water while leaving dissolved metals behind. Never boil water to try to reduce arsenic contamination.

Is the 10 ppb EPA arsenic limit safe?

The EPA estimates that water at exactly 10 ppb over a lifetime carries approximately a 1-in-300 increased risk of bladder or lung cancer. Many health advocates argue the limit should be lower. The only truly safe level is zero.

Does a refrigerator filter remove arsenic?

Most standard refrigerator filters are certified only for taste, odor, and chlorine (NSF/ANSI 42) — not arsenic. Check the specific NSF certification of your filter model. Most do not remove arsenic. A dedicated arsenic filter at the drinking tap is more reliable.

Arsenic in Your Water? There's a Filter for That.

Browse NSF-certified arsenic reduction systems — under-sink RO and whole-house media filters.

Arsenic Filters RO Systems

Additional Resources

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