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Idaho Private Well Water Quality 2026
Idaho has over 265,000 registered water wells — and for residents in the Treasure Valley and southern Idaho, arsenic and uranium in groundwater exceed federal drinking water limits at a significant percentage of monitored sites. Private wells receive zero mandatory testing under state or federal law. What’s in your water is entirely your responsibility to find out.
Arsenic in Idaho Well Water: A Naturally Occurring Crisis
Idaho’s biggest well water risk isn’t industrial pollution — it’s geology. Arsenic occurs naturally in Idaho’s volcanic rock and soils, and it dissolves into groundwater in concentrations that can exceed the federal drinking water limit of 10 parts per billion (ppb). According to the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR), arsenic has exceeded the MCL at 15% of statewide groundwater monitoring programme sites. The problem is concentrated in southern Idaho: the Weiser area (southern Washington County), the Treasure Valley (Ada and Canyon Counties), and Twin Falls County are among the highest-risk zones.
Arsenic is colourless and tasteless. It cannot be detected without laboratory testing. Long-term exposure to arsenic above 10 ppb is linked to skin, bladder, and lung cancers, cardiovascular disease, and neurological effects. The Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) advises that arsenic levels at 10 ppb or higher should be removed from drinking water as soon as possible. Boiling water does not remove arsenic — in fact, it concentrates it.
The DEQ recommends testing for arsenic once every three to five years. Given the documented distribution across southern Idaho, every well owner in this region should prioritise an arsenic test, regardless of how long their well has been in service.
Uranium: The Treasure Valley’s Hidden Contaminant
Uranium is a contaminant that receives far less attention than arsenic or PFAS, but for private well owners in the Treasure Valley — which covers Ada, Canyon, and surrounding counties — it represents a serious and well-documented risk. Like arsenic, uranium in Idaho’s groundwater is naturally occurring, associated with oxidised granitic sands in the upper aquifer system.
IDWR data show that approximately 20% of wells sampled in the statewide programme in Ada and Canyon Counties have exceeded the federal MCL for uranium of 30 micrograms per litre (µg/L). A Boise State University study published in collaboration with IDWR found that 17.1% of Treasure Valley Aquifer System wells had at least one measurement exceeding the MCL, with concentrations highest in the shallow portion of the aquifer — exactly the depth most private domestic wells are completed. The maximum recorded concentration in the dataset was 240 µg/L, more than eight times the federal limit.
Health effects from consuming uranium-contaminated water include an increased risk of kidney damage and cancer. Uranium is not regulated in Idaho’s groundwater quality standards for private wells — monitoring and testing is entirely the well owner’s responsibility. DEQ recommends testing every three to five years. The City of Meridian has undertaken extensive uranium monitoring within its service area due to concentrations exceeding the drinking water standard.
Nitrate and Bacteria Risks
Nitrate is the most widespread groundwater contaminant in Idaho, primarily driven by agricultural activity. Idaho is one of the most heavily irrigated states in the US, and fertiliser runoff, animal waste, and septic discharge have elevated nitrate levels across southern Idaho’s groundwater. IDWR data show that 5% of statewide monitoring programme sites have had nitrate concentrations exceeding the MCL of 10 mg/L — the legal limit for safe drinking water. A further 33% of sites show elevated levels between 2 and 10 mg/L, indicating widespread low-level contamination that can still pose risk with long-term exposure.
High nitrate levels are particularly dangerous for infants under six months, where they can cause methemoglobinemia — a condition in which blood loses its ability to carry oxygen, sometimes called “blue baby syndrome.” DEQ recommends testing for nitrate at least once per year for all private well owners.
Bacteria contamination is a risk in any private well system, particularly where wellheads are improperly sealed, where flooding has occurred, or where septic systems are located close to the well casing. Annual testing for coliform bacteria is strongly recommended, especially following periods of heavy rain or flooding.
PFAS in Idaho: Lower Risk, But Not Zero
Compared to states like Michigan, Ohio, or New Jersey, Idaho has relatively limited PFAS contamination in its groundwater. The state lacks the heavy industrial legacy that has driven large-scale PFAS plumes elsewhere. However, PFAS is not absent. The primary sources of concern are military installations: Mountain Home Air Force Base in Elmore County and Gowen Field (Boise Air Terminal) in Boise have both been flagged for elevated PFAS in groundwater linked to the use of AFFF firefighting chemicals. The Mountain Home AFB detection is the more significant of the two — Gowen Field levels are lower, though EWG data notes these soil/groundwater tests do not directly confirm how much PFAS reached tap water. The base is also midway through a $100 million project to transition its water supply from a declining local aquifer to the Snake River (plant completion expected summer 2026; full commissioning 2027).
Idaho DEQ does not currently have state-level PFAS MCLs. The state is pursuing EPA primacy for the 2024 federal PFAS rule, with mandatory monitoring for public water systems required by April 2027. Private wells have no mandatory PFAS monitoring requirement. If your well is within several miles of Mountain Home AFB or Gowen Field, PFAS testing is advisable. For the rest of the state, the risk is considered lower than national averages — but testing remains the only way to be certain.
Regulatory Situation for Idaho Well Owners
Private residential wells in Idaho are not regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act or Idaho’s equivalent state rules. IDWR has authority over well construction and driller licensing, and requires drilling permits for all new wells — but once a well is installed, the ongoing quality of the water is entirely the homeowner’s responsibility. DEQ oversees groundwater quality programmes, but these apply to public water systems, not private wells.
The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare (IDHW) provides guidance and an interactive groundwater quality map for private well owners, and maintains certified laboratory services through the State Laboratory. Local health districts across Idaho’s seven public health districts can also arrange testing and advise on certified labs in your area.
See our Idaho municipal water quality page for city-by-city tap water data, or use our live boil water notice tracker for active advisories across the state.
Known High-Risk Areas in Idaho
If you live near any of the following locations, well water testing is urgent — not precautionary.
Treasure Valley — Ada & Canyon Counties
Idaho’s most populous region and its most contaminated aquifer zone. Approximately 20% of wells sampled exceed the uranium MCL. Arsenic also elevated. Both contaminants are naturally occurring in the Treasure Valley Aquifer System’s shallow oxidising zone.
Weiser Area, Washington County
Among Idaho’s highest documented arsenic concentrations in private wells. A 1995 Idaho DEQ investigation found two private wells at 240 µg/L and 950 µg/L — 24 and 95 times the current federal limit of 10 ppb respectively. The contamination is naturally occurring. All well owners in Washington County should treat arsenic testing as urgent.
Twin Falls County
One of the named zones with documented elevated arsenic concentrations in IDWR’s statewide monitoring programme. Heavily irrigated agricultural area with additional nitrate risk from fertiliser runoff.
Mountain Home, Elmore County
Mountain Home Air Force Base has been flagged for PFAS contamination linked to AFFF firefighting foam. The base is also transitioning away from its declining Elmore County aquifer — a $100 million water treatment plant and pipeline from the Snake River’s CJ Strike Reservoir was under construction with plant completion expected summer 2026 and full commissioning by summer 2027. Well owners in the surrounding area should test for PFAS.
Gowen Field Area, Boise
The Idaho Air National Guard base at Gowen Field (Boise Air Terminal) has been flagged for PFAS in groundwater linked to AFFF use. Detection levels are lower than at Mountain Home AFB. EWG notes that on-base groundwater tests do not directly confirm PFAS levels in tap water. Private well owners immediately adjacent to the base should consider PFAS testing as a precaution.
Southern Idaho Agricultural Belt
The Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer spans 10,800 square miles and supplies water to roughly 300,000 people. Intensive irrigation across the region has elevated nitrate across shallow wells. IDWR’s Nitrate Priority Area programme conducts targeted monitoring here, including new sampling near Star in autumn 2025.
How to Test Your Idaho Well Water — and What to Do Next
For Idaho well owners — especially in the Treasure Valley and southern Idaho — the case for testing is not a precaution, it is a necessity. Arsenic and uranium are present at levels that exceed federal drinking water standards in a significant share of monitored wells across the region. Neither contaminant can be detected by taste, smell, or appearance. The only way to know if your water is safe is to test it.
For testing guidance, contact the Idaho Environmental Health Hotline at 1-800-445-8647 (IDHW) — the published helpline for private well owners needing advice on contaminants, test results, and certified laboratory referrals. You can also contact your local public health district — each of Idaho’s seven districts can direct you to certified testing laboratories and advise on what to test for based on your location. The Idaho DEQ groundwater quality pages at deq.idaho.gov and the IDWR interactive well water map are useful starting points for understanding the baseline risk in your county.
If tests return elevated arsenic, uranium, or nitrate, reverse osmosis is the most effective certified treatment for all three. For bacteria, UV disinfection is the recommended solution. Our well water filter guide covers the specific systems best suited to Idaho’s contamination profile, and you can browse our full water filter solutions page for all options. You can also check your ZIP code for local water quality context.
For other Western well water risks, see our pages on Ohio wells and Michigan wells. Return to the private well water directory to find your state.
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