If you’re on a private well, your water quality is entirely your responsibility. There’s no utility treating it, no EPA monitoring it, and no annual water quality report showing up in your mailbox. Roughly 43 million Americans — about 13% of the population — rely on private wells for their drinking water, and the majority have never had their water professionally tested.
Well water can be excellent — often cleaner than municipal water in areas with good geology and no nearby contamination sources. But it can also contain bacteria, nitrates, arsenic, iron, manganese, hydrogen sulfide, radon, and dozens of other contaminants that vary dramatically by region, well depth, and surrounding land use. The only way to know what’s in your well water is to test it. And the only way to fix problems is to install the right treatment equipment in the right order.
This guide walks you through the entire process: what to test for, how to interpret results, which treatment systems address which problems, the correct installation sequence, and how to maintain everything once it’s in place.
Why Well Water Is Different
Municipal water goes through a treatment plant where it’s filtered, disinfected (with chlorine or chloramine), and monitored continuously before reaching your tap. Private well water skips all of that. It’s pumped directly from an underground aquifer into your home with no treatment unless you add it yourself.
This creates both advantages and challenges:
Advantages:
- No chlorine or chloramine (no disinfection byproducts like TTHMs and HAA5)
- No fluoride (unless naturally present in your aquifer)
- No water bill (you own the water)
- Often lower TDS than heavily treated municipal water
Challenges:
- No disinfection — bacteria and viruses are possible, especially in shallow wells
- No monitoring — contaminant levels can change seasonally without warning
- Naturally occurring contaminants (iron, manganese, arsenic, radon, hardness) are common
- Agricultural runoff (nitrates, pesticides) can infiltrate groundwater
- You’re responsible for all testing, treatment, and maintenance
Step 1: Get Your Water Tested
Testing is the foundation of everything. Without test results, you’re guessing — and guessing leads to buying the wrong equipment or missing a serious contaminant.
What to Test For
The EPA recommends that private well owners test annually for total coliform bacteria, nitrates, total dissolved solids (TDS), and pH. But a comprehensive initial test should cover much more:
Essential annual tests:
- Total coliform bacteria and E. coli: Indicates whether your well is contaminated with bacteria from animal waste, septic systems, or surface water intrusion. Results are reported as present/absent or as a colony count. Any detection of E. coli means your water is unsafe to drink without disinfection.
- Nitrate: Common in agricultural areas from fertilizer runoff. The MCL is 10 ppm. Dangerous for infants (causes methemoglobinemia or “blue baby syndrome”). Carbon filters don’t remove nitrates — you need reverse osmosis or ion exchange.
- pH: Measures acidity/alkalinity. Well water below 6.5 is acidic and can corrode pipes, leaching lead and copper into your water. Above 8.5 can cause scale buildup and affect taste.
- TDS (Total Dissolved Solids): A general indicator of mineral content. Below 500 ppm is the EPA secondary standard. High TDS isn’t necessarily harmful but affects taste.
Recommended comprehensive tests (at least once, plus after any changes):
- Iron: One of the most common well water issues. Causes orange/brown staining on fixtures, laundry, and dishes. The secondary standard is 0.3 ppm, but many wells have 1-10+ ppm.
- Manganese: Often accompanies iron. Causes black staining and can affect neurological development in children at elevated levels. The health advisory is 0.3 ppm; the secondary standard is 0.05 ppm.
- Hardness: Calcium and magnesium content. Measured in grains per gallon (gpg) or ppm. Above 7 gpg is considered hard; above 10.5 gpg is very hard. Causes scale buildup in pipes and appliances, soap scum, and dry skin.
- Arsenic: Naturally occurring in groundwater in many regions, particularly the western US, New England, and parts of the Midwest. The MCL is 10 ppb. Odorless and tasteless — you can’t detect it without testing. Long-term exposure linked to cancer.
- Lead: Can leach from well components (brass fittings, lead solder) or occur naturally. The MCLG is zero — there is no safe level.
- Hydrogen sulfide: The “rotten egg” smell. Common in wells with sulfur-reducing bacteria. Not typically a health hazard at levels found in well water, but makes water unpleasant to use.
- Radon: A radioactive gas that can dissolve in groundwater. More common in areas with granite bedrock. Exposure through both drinking and showering (inhalation of released gas) is a concern.
- Fluoride: Naturally occurring in some aquifers. The MCL is 4 ppm; the secondary standard is 2 ppm. Excessive fluoride causes dental and skeletal fluorosis.
- Volatile organic compounds (VOCs): If your well is near industrial sites, gas stations, or dry cleaners, test for VOCs including benzene, toluene, and trichloroethylene.
- PFAS: If your well is near a military base, airport, or industrial facility that used firefighting foam, test for PFAS. The EPA MCL is 4 ppt for PFOA and PFOS.
Where to Get Tested
State-certified labs: Your state health department maintains a list of certified drinking water labs. Costs vary: a basic bacteria/nitrate test runs $25-$75, while a comprehensive panel costs $150-$400.
Mail-in test kits: Companies like Tap Score (SimpleLab) offer well-specific test kits that you collect at home and mail to their certified lab. Their Essential Well Water Test covers 54 analytes for around $200; their Advanced Well Water Test covers 111+ analytes for around $400. Results come with plain-language explanations and treatment recommendations.
County health departments: Many county health departments offer free or low-cost bacteria testing for well owners. Check with your local office.
When to Retest
- Annually for bacteria and nitrates (minimum)
- After any well repair, pump replacement, or plumbing work
- After flooding or heavy rainfall (surface water can infiltrate wells)
- If you notice changes in taste, odor, color, or water pressure
- If a neighbor’s well tests positive for contamination
- If nearby land use changes (new construction, agricultural activity, industrial development)
Step 2: Interpret Your Results
Once you have test results, compare each contaminant to the relevant standard:
If multiple contaminants are present (which is common with well water), you’ll likely need a multi-stage treatment system. The key is addressing each contaminant with the right technology in the right order.
Step 3: Choose Your Treatment Systems
Well water treatment typically involves a combination of whole-house (point-of-entry) and point-of-use systems. Here’s what each treatment technology does:
Sediment Filtration
What it removes: Sand, silt, clay, rust particles, and other suspended solids.
How it works: Water passes through a physical barrier (typically a pleated or spun polypropylene cartridge) that traps particles. Available in various micron ratings — 20-50 micron for coarse sediment, 5 micron for fine particles, 1 micron for very fine filtration.
When you need it: Almost every well water system should start with sediment filtration. It protects downstream equipment (softeners, carbon filters, UV systems, RO membranes) from clogging and damage.
Cost: $50-$200 for a whole-house sediment filter housing; $5-$20 per replacement cartridge (every 3-6 months depending on sediment load).
Water Softener (Ion Exchange)
What it removes: Hardness minerals (calcium, magnesium), plus low levels of iron (up to 2-3 ppm for most softeners), manganese, and barium.
How it works: Water passes through a tank of resin beads charged with sodium (or potassium) ions. The resin exchanges sodium for calcium and magnesium, removing hardness. The resin periodically regenerates by flushing with a salt (sodium chloride or potassium chloride) brine solution.
When you need it: If your hardness is above 7 gpg and you want to protect plumbing, appliances, and improve soap lathering. Also useful for low-level iron and manganese removal.
Cost: $800-$2,500 for a quality whole-house softener installed. Salt costs $5-$10 per 40-lb bag (one bag lasts 1-2 months for a family of four).
Iron and Manganese Filtration
What it removes: Iron (ferrous and ferric), manganese, and hydrogen sulfide.
How it works: Several technologies are available:
- Air injection (oxidation + filtration): Injects air into the water to oxidize dissolved (ferrous) iron into particulate (ferric) iron, then filters it out with a media bed. Effective for iron up to 10-15 ppm and hydrogen sulfide. No chemicals needed.
- Greensand/Birm/catalytic media: Specialized filter media that oxidizes and traps iron and manganese. Some require potassium permanganate or chlorine for regeneration; others (like Birm) use dissolved oxygen.
- Chemical oxidation + filtration: Chlorine or hydrogen peroxide is injected upstream of a filter to oxidize iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide. Most effective for very high iron levels (10+ ppm) or severe hydrogen sulfide.
When you need it: If iron exceeds 0.3 ppm (staining threshold) or manganese exceeds 0.05 ppm, or if you have hydrogen sulfide odor.
Cost: $1,000-$3,000 for a whole-house iron filter system installed.
Acid Neutralizer
What it does: Raises the pH of acidic water (below 6.5) to neutral (7.0+).
How it works: Water flows through a tank of calcite (calcium carbonate) or a calcite/corosex (magnesium oxide) blend. The acidic water dissolves the media, which raises the pH and adds calcium and magnesium to the water. The media is consumed over time and must be replenished.
When you need it: If your pH is below 6.5. Acidic water corrodes copper pipes (causing blue-green stains and pinhole leaks) and can leach lead from solder and brass fittings.
Cost: $800-$1,500 installed. Calcite media refills cost $30-$60 per 50-lb bag (typically needed every 6-12 months).
UV Disinfection
What it removes: Bacteria (including E. coli), viruses, and protozoan cysts (Cryptosporidium, Giardia).
How it works: Water flows past an ultraviolet lamp inside a stainless steel chamber. The UV light at 254 nm wavelength damages the DNA of microorganisms, rendering them unable to reproduce and effectively killing them. A properly sized UV system achieves 99.99% inactivation of bacteria and viruses.
When you need it: If your well has ever tested positive for coliform bacteria, or as a preventive measure for any well (especially shallow wells, wells in flood-prone areas, or wells near septic systems or livestock).
Critical requirement: UV light needs clear water to work. Turbidity, iron, and manganese can shield bacteria from the UV light. Always install sediment filtration and iron/manganese treatment upstream of the UV system. Water should have less than 1 NTU turbidity, less than 0.3 ppm iron, and less than 0.05 ppm manganese for effective UV disinfection.
Cost: $500-$1,500 for a whole-house UV system. UV lamp replacement costs $80-$150 annually (lamps should be replaced every 12 months regardless of whether they still light up — UV output degrades over time).
Whole-House Carbon Filtration
What it removes: Chlorine (if you’re chlorinating), VOCs, pesticides, herbicides, taste and odor compounds, some organic chemicals.
How it works: Water passes through a tank of granular activated carbon (GAC) that adsorbs organic chemicals and chlorine. Backwashing models periodically flush the carbon bed to prevent channeling and extend media life.
When you need it: If you’re using chlorine injection for disinfection (the carbon filter removes the residual chlorine after it’s done its job), or if your water contains VOCs, pesticides, or taste/odor issues.
Cost: $500-$1,500 for a whole-house backwashing carbon filter. Carbon media replacement every 3-5 years costs $100-$300.
Reverse Osmosis (Point-of-Use)
What it removes: 95-99% of dissolved contaminants including arsenic, fluoride, nitrates, lead, PFAS, sodium, TDS, and more.
When you need it: For drinking water purification when your well contains contaminants that whole-house systems can’t adequately address — particularly arsenic, fluoride, nitrates, and PFAS. Install under the kitchen sink for drinking and cooking water.
Cost: $200-$600 for an under-sink RO system. Annual filter costs $60-$150.
Step 4: Install in the Correct Order
The sequence of treatment equipment matters. Each system protects the next one downstream. Here’s the recommended installation order from the well to the house:
1. Sediment pre-filter → Protects all downstream equipment from particles
2. Acid neutralizer (if pH is below 6.5) → Prevents corrosion in all downstream equipment and plumbing
3. Iron/manganese filter (if needed) → Removes iron and manganese before they can foul the softener resin or block UV light
4. Water softener (if hardness is above 7 gpg) → Removes hardness after iron has been addressed
5. Carbon filter (if using chlorine injection, or for VOC/taste issues) → Polishes water and removes chemical contaminants
6. UV disinfection → Last whole-house stage, treats clear, filtered water for maximum UV effectiveness
7. Under-sink RO (for drinking water) → Final purification at the kitchen tap for arsenic, nitrates, fluoride, PFAS, and other dissolved contaminants
Not every well needs all seven stages. A well with good bacteria results, moderate hardness, and no chemical contamination might only need a sediment filter and a water softener. A well with bacteria, high iron, and arsenic might need sediment filtration, an iron filter, UV disinfection, and an under-sink RO. Your test results dictate the configuration.
Step 5: Maintain Your System
Treatment equipment only works if it’s maintained. Here’s a maintenance schedule for common well water treatment components:
Pro tip: Set calendar reminders for every maintenance task. The most common reason well water treatment systems fail is neglected maintenance — expired UV lamps, exhausted filter media, and empty salt tanks.
Well Maintenance Beyond Filtration
Your treatment system is only as good as your well. Basic well maintenance includes:
- Inspect the well cap: Make sure it’s intact, properly sealed, and not cracked. A damaged well cap allows insects, rodents, and surface water to enter the well.
- Maintain the area around the well: Keep a 50-foot clear zone around the wellhead. No pesticide application, no fertilizer, no animal waste, no fuel storage within this zone.
- Septic system distance: Your septic system should be at least 50 feet from the well (100 feet is better). Ensure your septic system is properly maintained — a failing septic system is one of the most common sources of well contamination.
- Grade the land: The ground around the wellhead should slope away from the well to prevent surface water from pooling around the casing.
- Shock chlorination: If bacteria are detected, shock chlorination (pouring a chlorine solution into the well and flushing the system) can eliminate the contamination. This is a temporary fix — if bacteria return, you need to identify and fix the source (damaged casing, surface water intrusion) and install permanent UV disinfection.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a complete well water treatment system cost?
It depends entirely on your water quality. A basic setup (sediment filter + water softener) runs $1,000-$3,000 installed. A comprehensive system (sediment + iron filter + softener + UV + under-sink RO) can cost $3,000-$7,000 installed. While that sounds like a lot, it’s a one-time investment that protects your family’s health and your home’s plumbing for years. Annual maintenance costs typically run $200-$500.
Can I treat my well water myself, or do I need a professional?
Many well water treatment components are DIY-friendly — sediment filters, UV systems, and under-sink RO systems come with installation instructions and require basic plumbing skills. Water softeners and iron filters are more complex (they require drain connections, electrical connections for the control valve, and proper sizing) and are often best installed by a water treatment professional. At minimum, have a professional assess your water test results and recommend the right equipment configuration.
How often should I test my well water?
The EPA recommends annual testing for bacteria and nitrates at minimum. I recommend a comprehensive test every 3-5 years, plus annual bacteria/nitrate testing, plus immediate testing after any event that could affect water quality (flooding, well repair, nearby construction or agricultural changes).
My well water smells like rotten eggs. Is it dangerous?
The rotten egg smell is hydrogen sulfide gas. At the levels typically found in well water (0.1-5 ppm), it’s not a health hazard, but it makes water unpleasant to drink and use. It can also corrode plumbing and tarnish silverware. Treatment options include air injection oxidation, oxidizing filters, or activated carbon filtration. An air injection system is usually the most effective for moderate to high hydrogen sulfide levels.
Do I need a whole-house system or just a drinking water filter?
It depends on the contaminant. Iron, manganese, hardness, hydrogen sulfide, and bacteria affect your entire home — staining fixtures, damaging appliances, and creating odor throughout the house. These require whole-house treatment. Contaminants like arsenic, nitrates, fluoride, and PFAS are primarily a drinking water concern — an under-sink RO system at the kitchen tap is sufficient. Many well owners need both: whole-house treatment for aesthetic and infrastructure issues, plus point-of-use RO for drinking water purity.
The Bottom Line
Well water treatment follows a logical sequence: test first, interpret results, select the right treatment technologies, install them in the correct order, and maintain everything on schedule. The investment in testing ($100-$400) pays for itself many times over by ensuring you buy the right equipment and don’t miss a contaminant that could affect your family’s health. Start with a comprehensive water test, address the most critical issues first (bacteria, nitrates, lead, arsenic), and build out your treatment system as needed.
Related articles:
- Best Water Filters for Well Water — top-rated systems reviewed
- Best Water Filters for Iron — iron-specific treatment options
- Best Water Filters for Bacteria — UV and other disinfection systems
- How to Read a Water Quality Report — understanding water test results
- How to Choose a Whole House Water Filter — whole-house system selection guide