Local Water Estimate
Port St. Lucie estimated water profile
Estimate likely hardness, disinfectant, drinking-water, and plumbing risk for Port St. Lucie, then compare the water treatment setup most likely to fit your home.
Treatment urgency
51
estimated risk score
Utility profile
General U.S. Utility Profile
ZIP 34986
This water profile combines normalized utility concentration indicators (hardness, TDS, disinfectant byproducts, and lead/PFAS indicators) with imported EPA ECHO SDWIS public records when available. It is not a direct tap sample.
Uses public EPA ECHO SDWIS records for local public-system and compliance context plus normalized utility concentration profile values. This is not a direct tap sample, municipal CCR replacement, or lab report; final system selection should account for your home, usage, and plumbing specifics.
Source: Normalized utility concentration profile (2025-10-01)
Risk Breakdown
What the local profile suggests
Scale buildup
58
Hardness profile: Moderate to High
Disinfectants
56
Chloramine, THM, and HAA5 pressure estimate.
Drinking water
36
TDS / taste risk: Moderate
Plumbing impact
57
Long-term fixture, appliance, and pipe risk estimate.
Contaminant Profile
Likely concerns for Port St. Lucie
This is a utility-profile estimate, not a lab test from your tap. It gives you a better starting point before selecting a softener, whole-home filter, or reverse osmosis system.
Hardness Minerals
moderate140 mg/L hardness utility-profile value.
Chloramines
low1.8 mg/L disinfectant utility-profile value.
Disinfection Byproducts
moderate55 ug/L THM and 33 ug/L HAA5 utility-profile values.
Lead/PFAS Indicator
low2.0 ug/L lead and 4.0 ng/L PFAS utility-profile values.
Why It Matters
Clear water can still carry things you would not choose to drink every day.
Most water problems do not announce themselves. They show up as long-term exposure, scale buildup, irritated skin, bad taste, damaged appliances, or contaminants that matter more for kids and sensitive households.
Lead and copper
Lead can enter water after it leaves the utility through older plumbing, fixtures, or service lines. Long-term exposure is associated with developmental and neurological harm, especially for children.
PFAS and persistent chemicals
PFAS are often called forever chemicals because they break down slowly. Research links some PFAS exposure with immune, thyroid, liver, kidney, reproductive, and cancer concerns.
Disinfection byproducts
Chlorine and chloramines help keep water safe from microbes, but they can form byproducts such as TTHMs and HAA5. Elevated long-term exposure is why these are regulated.
Arsenic, nitrate, and metals
Some regulated contaminants are invisible at the tap. Arsenic is tied to skin, cardiovascular, and cancer risk; nitrate can be an acute concern for infants at high levels.
Hardness and scale
Hardness is not usually the scary drinking-water contaminant, but it quietly damages heaters, fixtures, appliances, glass, laundry, skin feel, and flow rate over time.
Taste, odor, and dissolved solids
Bad taste can be more than annoying. It can signal disinfectants, dissolved minerals, old plumbing, or source-water changes worth checking before choosing a system.
Recommended Setup
Best next step for this water profile
Whole-home carbon filtration. Final selection should account for your home size, usage, plumbing layout, and water symptoms.