Your Local Water Profile: Fullerton
This profile explains what the applicable water provider reported for Fullerton, what those results may mean throughout a home, and where property-specific testing or inspection may still be needed.
Water provider: City of Fullerton
Public water system CA3010010 · 2024 report · 2024 data retained; monitor for the next official update
View the 2024 City of Fullerton Consumer Confidence ReportWhat the official water report says
Your water at a glance
City of Fullerton
The report lists hardness as 241 ppm; this is very hard on the USGS scale.
USGS hardness scale: 0–60 soft; 61–120 moderately hard; 121–180 hard; >180 very hard, in mg/L as CaCO3.
City of Fullerton — compliance, as reported
The report states: “The City of Fullerton vigilantly safeguards its water supply, and as in years past, the water delivered to your home meets the standards required by the state and federal regulatory agencies.”
Violations or advisories, as reported: The report includes a Nitrate Advisory for levels above 10 mg/L, which is a health risk for infants less than six months of age. It also includes a PFAS Advisory, noting that subsequent testing detected levels at or above response levels, and the City responded by temporarily discontinuing use of sources until appropriate treatment can be installed. Two PFAS treatment plants have been brought online. There were no MCL or AL violations reported in the tables.
The Three C's — 1 of 3
Chemistry
What does this water tend to do in a home?
Turbidity
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ntu
Distribution System · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Specific Conductance
The utility reported: 764 µmho/cm
Groundwater · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Alkalinity, total as CaCO3
The utility reported: 139 ppm
Groundwater · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 14 grains per gallon
Groundwater · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Hardness, total as CaCO3
The utility reported: 241 ppm
Groundwater · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Chloride
The utility reported: 106 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Color
The utility reported: 1 color units
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Odor
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit threshold odor number
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Specific Conductance
The utility reported: 996 µmho/cm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Sulfate
The utility reported: 225 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Total Dissolved Solids
The utility reported: 632 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Alkalinity, total
The utility reported: 118 ppm as CaCO3
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 272 ppm as CaCO3
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 16 grains/gal
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Magnesium
The utility reported: 26 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
The Three C's — 2 of 3
Contaminants
What was reported, and what do the applicable standards mean?
Legal limit — maximum contaminant level (MCL)
The highest level legally allowed in public drinking water under the applicable rule. Do not use MCL as a generic label for goals, action levels, notification levels, or independent guidelines. It is different from a non-enforceable health goal.
California health goal — public health goal (PHG)
A non-enforceable health-protective target developed for standard-setting context. It is not the California legal limit.
Federal health goal — maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG)
A non-enforceable EPA public-health target used in setting standards. It is not the legal limit.
Legal disinfectant-residual limit — maximum residual disinfectant level (MRDL)
The highest level of a drinking-water disinfectant allowed under the applicable rule. It is not an MCL for a contaminant.
City of Fullerton — regulated contaminants reported as detected (23)
Total Trihalomethanes
The utility reported: 42 ppb
Reported range: 7 - 33
Benchmark: 80
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Byproducts of Chlorine Disinfection
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Haloacetic Acids
The utility reported: 15 ppb
Reported range: ND - 11
Benchmark: 60
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Byproducts of Chlorine Disinfection
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Chlorine Residual
The utility reported: 1.17 ppm
Reported range: ND - 3.3
Benchmark: 4 · Health goal (goal): 4 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Disinfectant Added for Treatment
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Fluoride
The utility reported: 0.6 ppm
Reported range: 0.41 - 0.69
Benchmark: 2
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Lead
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Benchmark: 15 · Health goal (goal): 0.2 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Corrosion of Household Plumbing
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Copper
The utility reported: 0.19 ppm
Benchmark: 1.3 · Health goal (goal): 0.3 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Corrosion of Household Plumbing
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Uranium
The utility reported: 2.8 pCi/L
Reported range: 1.3 - 6.4
Benchmark: 20 · Health goal (goal): 0.43 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Tetrachloroethylene, PCE
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Reported range: ND - 1.3
Benchmark: 5 · Health goal (goal): 0.06 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Trichloroethylene, TCE
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Reported range: ND - 0.8
Benchmark: 5 · Health goal (goal): 1.7 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Arsenic
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Reported range: ND - 3
Benchmark: 10 · Health goal (goal): 0.004 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Fluoride
The utility reported: 0.52 ppm
Reported range: 0.47 - 0.57
Benchmark: 2 · Health goal (goal): 1 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Hexavalent Chromium
The utility reported: 0.44 ppb
Reported range: ND - 1.4
Benchmark: 10 · Health goal (goal): 0.02 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Nitrate
The utility reported: 2.2 ppm as N
Reported range: 1.2 - 5.8
Benchmark: 10 · Health goal (goal): 10 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Fertilizers, Septic Tanks
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Nitrate+Nitrite
The utility reported: 2.2 ppm as N
Reported range: 1.2 - 5.8
Benchmark: 10 · Health goal (goal): 10 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Fertilizers, Septic Tanks
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perchlorate
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Reported range: ND - 2.2
Benchmark: 6 · Health goal (goal): 1 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Selenium
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Reported range: ND - 10
Benchmark: 50 · Health goal (goal): 30 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Gross Alpha Particle Activity
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit pCi/L
Reported range: ND - 5
Benchmark: 15 · Health goal (goal): 0 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Gross Beta Particle Activity
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit pCi/L
Reported range: ND - 5
Benchmark: 50 · Health goal (goal): 0 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Decay of Natural and Man-made Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Uranium
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit pCi/L
Reported range: ND - 3
Benchmark: 20 · Health goal (goal): 0.43 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Aluminum
The utility reported: 0.093 ppm
Reported range: ND - 0.15
Benchmark: 1 · Health goal (goal): 0.6 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Treatment Process Residue, Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Barium
The utility reported: 0.124 ppm
Reported range: 0.124
Benchmark: 1 · Health goal (goal): 2 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Refinery Discharge, Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Bromate
The utility reported: 2 ppb
Reported range: ND - 9.2
Benchmark: 10 · Health goal (goal): 0.1 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Byproduct of Drinking Water Ozonation
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Fluoride treatment-related
The utility reported: 0.7 ppm
Reported range: 0.3 - 0.8
Benchmark: 2 · Health goal (goal): 1 — not an enforceable limit
Violation per report: No
Typical source, per the report: Water Additive for Dental Health
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
City of Fullerton — unregulated monitoring and secondary (aesthetic) records (44)
Unregulated means monitored without an applicable enforceable legal limit (MCL) — it does not mean unimportant or illegal. Secondary records address aesthetic, cosmetic, or technical effects such as taste, odor, staining, or scale, and are not automatically primary health standards.
Color
The utility reported: 0.1 color units
Reported range: ND - 2
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Turbidity
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ntu
Reported range: ND - 0.6
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Chloride
The utility reported: 72 ppm
Reported range: 59 - 83
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Specific Conductance
The utility reported: 764 µmho/cm
Reported range: 625 - 1,080
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Sulfate
The utility reported: 131 ppm
Reported range: 101 - 200
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Total Dissolved Solids
The utility reported: 484 ppm
Reported range: 400 - 706
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Turbidity
The utility reported: 0.13 ntu
Reported range: ND - 0.35
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Alkalinity, total as CaCO3
The utility reported: 139 ppm
Reported range: 114 - 212
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Bicarbonate
The utility reported: 168 ppm as HCO3
Reported range: 140 - 258
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Boron
The utility reported: 0.18 ppm
Reported range: 0.15 - 0.21
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Calcium
The utility reported: 71 ppm
Reported range: 60 - 95
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 14 grains per gallon
Reported range: 11 - 22
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Hardness, total as CaCO3
The utility reported: 241 ppm
Reported range: 195 - 375
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Magnesium
The utility reported: 16 ppm
Reported range: 11 - 33
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Butane Sulfonic Acid
The utility reported: 3.6 ppt
Reported range: ND - 6.9
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Butanoic Acid
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppt
Reported range: ND - 6.3
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Heptanoic Acid
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppt
Reported range: ND - 4.5
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Hexane Sulfonic Acid
The utility reported: 3 ppt
Reported range: ND - 7
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Hexanoic Acid
The utility reported: 6.2 ppt
Reported range: ND - 12
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Octane Sulfonic Acid
The utility reported: 6.4 ppt
Reported range: ND - 14
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Octanoic Acid
The utility reported: 5.2 ppt
Reported range: ND - 11
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Perfluoro Pentanoic Acid
The utility reported: 7.8 ppt
Reported range: ND - 13
Typical source, per the report: Industrial Waste Discharge
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
pH
The utility reported: 7.9 pH unit
Reported range: 7.8 - 8
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Potassium
The utility reported: 3.8 ppm
Reported range: 3 - 4.1
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Sodium
The utility reported: 68 ppm
Reported range: 57 - 84
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Lithium
The utility reported: 4.6 ppb
Reported range: ND - 22.9
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 8 · official report
Aluminum
The utility reported: 93 ppb
Reported range: ND - 150
Typical source, per the report: Treatment Process Residue, Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Chloride
The utility reported: 106 ppm
Reported range: 93 - 116
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Color
The utility reported: 1 color units
Reported range: 1-2
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Odor
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit threshold odor number
Reported range: ND - 1
Typical source, per the report: Naturally-occurring Organic Materials
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Specific Conductance
The utility reported: 996 µmho/cm
Reported range: 888 - 1,080
Typical source, per the report: Substances that Form Ions in Water
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Sulfate
The utility reported: 225 ppm
Reported range: 196 - 253
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Total Dissolved Solids
The utility reported: 632 ppm
Reported range: 556 - 690
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Alkalinity, total
The utility reported: 118 ppm as CaCO3
Reported range: 105 - 127
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Boron
The utility reported: 0.14 ppm
Reported range: 0.14
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Calcium
The utility reported: 68 ppm
Reported range: 58 - 78
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 272 ppm as CaCO3
Reported range: 235 - 305
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Hardness, total
The utility reported: 16 grains/gal
Reported range: 14 - 18
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Magnesium
The utility reported: 26 ppm
Reported range: 22 - 29
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
pH
The utility reported: 8.2 units
Reported range: 8.2
Typical source, per the report: Hydrogen Ion Concentration
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Potassium
The utility reported: 5 ppm
Reported range: 4.4 - 5.4
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Sodium
The utility reported: 105 ppm
Reported range: 90 - 117
Typical source, per the report: Runoff or Leaching from Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Total Organic Carbon
The utility reported: 2.4 ppm
Reported range: 2 - 2.6
Typical source, per the report: Various Natural and Man-made Sources
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Lithium
The utility reported: 21 ppb
Reported range: ND - 35
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 10 · official report
The Three C's — 3 of 3
Corrosion
What conditions could influence pipes, fixtures, and a water heater?
Alkalinity, total as CaCO3
The utility reported: 139 ppm
Groundwater · report p. PAGE 7 · official report
Chloride
The utility reported: 106 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Sulfate
The utility reported: 225 ppm
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Alkalinity, total
The utility reported: 118 ppm as CaCO3
MWDSC Treated Surface Water · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Lead
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit ppb
Typical source, per the report: Corrosion of Household Plumbing
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Copper
The utility reported: 0.19 ppm
Typical source, per the report: Corrosion of Household Plumbing
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 6 · official report
Gross Alpha Particle Activity
The utility reported: Not detected at the report's stated reporting limit pCi/L
Reported range: ND - 5
Typical source, per the report: Erosion of Natural Deposits
Reported constituent · report p. PAGE 9 · official report
Whole-Home Relevance
What this may mean throughout your home
Local conditions can be relevant to equipment and fixtures — actual effects depend on your property.
Water heater (tank and tankless)
- What the local report can tell us
- The report's hardness and mineral values above are the system-level inputs most relevant to scale and sediment where water is heated.
- What a homeowner may notice
- Hardness minerals can contribute to scale on heating surfaces, sediment in tanks, and more frequent flushing or descaling needs.
- What the report cannot tell us
- Property-specific outcomes — actual effects depend on temperature, use, equipment design, installation, maintenance, and property plumbing.
- Responsible next step
- Inspect the actual water heater and plumbing when symptoms involve hot-water odor, scale, sediment, corrosion, flow, noise, or repeated service demand.
Dishwasher and washing machine
- What the local report can tell us
- Reported hardness and secondary (aesthetic) records are the relevant system-level context for spotting and residue.
- What a homeowner may notice
- Hard water can change soap behavior and may contribute to spotting on dishes and residue in laundry.
- What the report cannot tell us
- Property-specific outcomes — actual effects depend on temperature, use, equipment design, installation, maintenance, and property plumbing.
- Responsible next step
- Inspect the actual water heater and plumbing when symptoms involve hot-water odor, scale, sediment, corrosion, flow, noise, or repeated service demand.
Pipes, fixtures, faucets, and supply lines
- What the local report can tell us
- The corrosion-related inputs above (such as pH) describe the water entering the property — not the condition of any specific plumbing.
- What a homeowner may notice
- Mineral deposits can appear on aerators and fixtures; corrosion outcomes depend on materials, age, and water conditions together.
- What the report cannot tell us
- Property-specific outcomes — actual effects depend on temperature, use, equipment design, installation, maintenance, and property plumbing.
- Responsible next step
- Inspect the actual water heater and plumbing when symptoms involve hot-water odor, scale, sediment, corrosion, flow, noise, or repeated service demand.
Drinking and cooking water
- What the local report can tell us
- The contaminant records above show what the utility reported for the system and period, with each benchmark type labeled.
- What a homeowner may notice
- Taste, odor, or aesthetic preferences can be noticeable even when health-based standards are met.
- What the report cannot tell us
- Property-specific outcomes — actual effects depend on temperature, use, equipment design, installation, maintenance, and property plumbing.
- Responsible next step
- Inspect the actual water heater and plumbing when symptoms involve hot-water odor, scale, sediment, corrosion, flow, noise, or repeated service demand.
Decision Pathways
Treatment pathways to evaluate
Treatment is a decision pathway, not a product conclusion — no equipment can be responsibly chosen from city-level data alone.
The evaluation sequence we follow, in order:
- 1Define the concern
- 2Verify utility-level and home-specific evidence
- 3Choose point of treatment
- 4Verify the exact certified reduction claim for the exact model
- 5Review tradeoffs and maintenance
Water filtration
- Objective it can address
- Specific substances or aesthetic conditions (taste, odor, chlorine character).
- Point of treatment
- Point of entry or point of use, depending on the objective.
- Limitations to verify
- A filter works only for the conditions and reduction claims its exact design and certification support — filtration does not soften water.
Certification note: a standard number alone doesn't prove a product reduces every contaminant — the exact model's certified claim must match your objective.
Water softening
- Objective it can address
- Hardness minerals (calcium and magnesium) and the scale they can contribute to.
- Point of treatment
- Typically point of entry, confirmed by evaluation.
- Limitations to verify
- Softening primarily exchanges hardness minerals — it is not a universal contaminant-removal device.
Certification note: a standard number alone doesn't prove a product reduces every contaminant — the exact model's certified claim must match your objective.
Reverse osmosis
- Objective it can address
- Specified dissolved substances at a dedicated outlet, commonly drinking and cooking water.
- Point of treatment
- Typically point of use.
- Limitations to verify
- Produces a reject-water stream and needs pressure and maintenance; verify the exact NSF/ANSI 58 reduction claims for the exact model. It is not automatically the best system for every home.
Certification note: a standard number alone doesn't prove a product reduces every contaminant — the exact model's certified claim must match your objective.
When testing is the right next step
Use a certified laboratory when the concern is tap-specific, property-specific, or not resolved by the utility report.
When inspection is the right next step
Inspect the actual water heater and plumbing when symptoms involve hot-water odor, scale, sediment, corrosion, flow, noise, or repeated service demand.
Evidence You Can Check
Official reports, sources, and methodology
Official report — City of Fullerton
2025 Water Quality Report · data year 2024 · 2024 data retained; monitor for the next official update
View the 2024 City of Fullerton Consumer Confidence ReportSource water, per the report: The drinking water is a blend of primarily groundwater from the Orange County groundwater basin and surface water imported by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWDSC). MWDSC's imported water sources are the State Water Project from Northern California and the Colorado River Aqueduct. The city has eight active wells and seven active imported water connections.
Nearby community water profiles
Property-Specific Next Step
Request a Water Quality Evaluation
Request a water-heater and water-quality evaluation tailored to the property, equipment, and homeowner objective.
A property-specific evaluation confirms your goals, provider, tap conditions, plumbing, equipment, installation, and maintenance before any treatment recommendation — this profile alone is never used to prescribe equipment.

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