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FALLS CITY, CITY OF

FALLS CITY, OR · 1,051 people served · Surface Water

Data last updated: 2026-06-21

A Meets all standards: no recent violations

How is this graded?

34 total violations on record. No currently active health-based violations.

Health-Based Violations

  • Contaminant #5000: TT (Resolved)

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FALLS CITY, CITY OF: Frequently Asked Questions

Is FALLS CITY, CITY OF water safe to drink?

FALLS CITY, CITY OF currently has no active health-based violations and has met all EPA standards in recent years. While this indicates good water quality compliance, you may still want to consider filtering your water, especially if your home has older plumbing that may contain lead.

What violations has FALLS CITY, CITY OF had?

Recent health-based violations at FALLS CITY, CITY OF include: Contaminant #5000. See the full violation history on this page for dates, status, and details.

Does FALLS CITY, CITY OF water have lead?

Lead in drinking water typically comes from household plumbing, not from FALLS CITY, CITY OF's treatment plant. See the Lead & Copper section on this page for the most recent 90th-percentile lead test results. If your home was built before 1986, consider running cold water for 30 seconds before drinking and using an NSF/ANSI 53-certified filter.

Related water quality pages

Water Hardness

This system is supplied by surface water (a lake or river). Regional USGS hardness data is based on groundwater and does not reflect surface-water systems, whose tap water is often considerably softer. For an exact figure, see your utility's annual water quality report (CCR).

Hardness is not a health concern — it is a measure of dissolved calcium and magnesium.

Water pH Level

Estimated based on USGS water monitoring data for your state.

7.3 pH
Neutral
Acidic (4)Neutral (7)Alkaline (10)
✓ Within EPA recommended range (6.5–8.5)
What this means: Neutral pH is ideal for drinking water. Your water is well within the EPA recommended range of 6.5–8.5.

Source: USGS National Water Information System. EPA secondary standard for pH is 6.5–8.5. Contact your water utility for exact values.

Lead & Copper

What To Do

Violations

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