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πŸ’§ Know Your Water

How to Test Your Water
in Colorado

Your tap water may meet federal standards and still contain things worth knowing about. Here's how to test it β€” many options are completely free.

⏱ 8 min read πŸ”οΈ Colorado-specific βœ… Updated 2026
Lab technician testing water samples

Why Test Your Water in Colorado?

Colorado's water comes from snowmelt, rivers, and groundwater aquifers β€” and while municipal suppliers test it heavily, what enters the treatment plant isn't the same as what flows from your faucet. Old pipes, home plumbing, and your neighborhood's infrastructure all play a role.

Colorado also has specific concerns most other states don't: arsenic from natural geology, PFAS contamination near military bases and airports, high mineral hardness along the Front Range, and nitrates from agricultural runoff in rural areas. Testing once gives you a real picture of what's actually in your water β€” not just what enters your street.

πŸ’‘ Colorado Fact Denver Water's system is among the most tested in the country, but it's required to report on 90+ contaminants. That doesn't mean all 90 are zero. The annual Water Quality Report (Consumer Confidence Report) is public β€” and knowing how to read it is the first step.

Step 1 β€” Read Your Annual Water Quality Report

Every municipal water supplier is required by federal law to publish an annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR). It shows exactly what was detected in your water and whether it meets EPA limits. This is your free baseline β€” start here before spending anything.

⚠️ One Important Caveat The annual report tests water at the treatment plant or in the distribution system β€” not at your tap. Lead, for example, almost always comes from household plumbing or service lines, not the source water. That's why point-of-use testing still matters even if your utility report looks clean.

Step 2 β€” Get Free Testing From Your Water District

Several Colorado water providers offer free or low-cost testing for specific contaminants. Take advantage of these before spending money on a lab kit.

🚰
Free

Denver Water β€” Free Lead Test

If you're in Denver Water's service area, you can request a free lead test kit. They'll mail it to you, you collect samples, mail them back, and get results.

Request Kit β†’
πŸ§ͺ
Free β€” Private Wells Only

CDPHE β€” Free PFAS Testing

Colorado's PFAS Testing and Assistance Program offers free PFAS testing for private well owners across the state. Eligible homeowners can also receive free certified filters.

Apply for Kit β†’
πŸ”¬
Fee-based (State Lab)

CDPHE State Laboratory

Colorado's state health lab offers certified water testing for a wide range of contaminants. More affordable than commercial labs, and results are legally defensible.

View Services β†’
🏠
Free (with no obligation)

Culligan Denver β€” Free In-Home Test

Culligan offers a free in-home water analysis in the Denver metro. They'll test hardness, pH, iron, chlorine, and more on the spot. No purchase required β€” but expect a sales conversation.

Schedule Test β†’

Step 3 β€” Know What You're Testing For

Not all contaminants behave the same way, and not all are relevant to every Colorado home. Here's what to prioritize based on your situation:

Contaminant Who Should Test Risk Level Colorado Context
Lead Homes built before 1986 High Comes from old pipes and solder, not source water. No safe level for children.
PFAS ("forever chemicals") Well owners near military bases, airports, industrial sites High Detected near Peterson SFB, Buckley SFB, and Denver International Airport areas.
Arsenic Well owners, rural Colorado High Naturally occurring in Colorado geology. More common in private wells than city water.
Nitrates Rural areas, private wells near farms High Agricultural runoff concern on the Eastern Plains. Dangerous for infants under 6 months.
Hard Water / Minerals All Front Range homeowners Moderate Denver Water is moderately hard (75–130 mg/L). Hard water damages appliances and pipes over time.
Chlorine / Disinfection Byproducts City water users Moderate Added for safety but can affect taste and long-term health at elevated levels.
Coliform Bacteria / E. coli Private well owners High Wells should be tested annually, especially after flooding or nearby construction.
Radon Homes with well water in high-radon areas Moderate Colorado has elevated radon geology. Can be released into air when showering.
pH / Acidity All homeowners Low Affects taste and can accelerate pipe corrosion if outside normal range (6.5–8.5).

Step 4 β€” DIY Test Kits vs. Lab Testing

There are two ways to test beyond the free options: quick DIY strips you can buy online, or certified mail-in lab kits. They serve different purposes.

βœ… Wirecutter's Top Pick: Tap Score For comprehensive lab testing, the Tap Score Advanced City Water Test is Wirecutter's top recommendation. It covers 105+ contaminants including lead, PFAS, arsenic, bacteria, nitrates, and disinfection byproducts β€” with a clear, jargon-free report. Runs $150–$200 but gives you real data, not just a pass/fail.

DIY Test Strips β€” Quick, Cheap, Directional

Best for checking hardness, pH, chlorine, and basic parameters at home. Not accurate enough for lead or PFAS β€” but useful for quick spot-checks or seeing if hardness is worth treating.

Certified Mail-In Lab Tests β€” Accurate & Defensible

Required when you need actual numbers β€” especially for lead, PFAS, arsenic, or bacteria. Only certified lab results are accepted for real estate transactions, legal purposes, or filter verification.

⚠️ If You're Selling Your Home Buyers are increasingly asking for water test results in Colorado, especially for homes on well water. A clean certified test from a state-accredited lab is worth having on hand. CDPHE maintains a list of accredited labs at cdphe.colorado.gov.

When to Test β€” Colorado Timing

πŸ“Ή How to Test Your Home's Water Quality

Step-by-step walkthrough of testing methods β€” from strips to lab kits

More Water Resources for Colorado Homeowners

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