PFAS water testing at a glance
Quick answers: what to test, which method, who performs it
Drinking water (finished water from a tap or distribution system)
- Use EPA Method 533 (25 PFAS) or EPA Method 537.1 (18 PFAS).
- Both meet compliance monitoring needs, such as UCMR 5 (2023–2025) and state programs.
- These methods share 14 core PFAS, so results are comparable for compliance.
Non‑potable water and environmental media (wastewater, surface water, groundwater, soil, sediment, biosolids, fish tissue)
- Use EPA Method 1633 (up to 40 PFAS compounds) across eight matrices.
- Screening for total PFAS signal in non‑potable water
- Use EPA Method 1621 to measure adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) as an indicator of organofluorines at low ppt.
Who tests
- State‑accredited laboratories, water utilities, and qualified contractors.
- Consumer PFAS water test kits can be useful for awareness but are not accepted for compliance.
- Some states or local agencies may offer free PFAS water testing for private wells in impact zones. Check your health or environmental agency.
Why PFAS testing matters now
- Health and persistence: Compounds like PFOA and PFOS are well‑studied and can affect health at ppt levels, that’s why testing for PFAS in drinking water is essential. Communities rely on water testing forever chemicals to identify potential health risks from PFAS that persist in water.
- Regulation: The EPA’s National Primary Drinking Water Regulation for PFAS (2024) and UCMR 5 boosted standardized monitoring using 533/537.1.
- Community impacts: Homes near military bases, airfields with AFFF use, landfills, and chemical plants often face higher testing needs. PFAS do not break down naturally and remain in drinking water for decades, meaning families may unknowingly face PFAS in their drinking water. Testing helps them know what contaminants in drinking water are present, reduce exposure to PFAS, and decide what steps to take next.
The core test panel and detection limits
- Drinking water panels: 18–25 PFAS measured by LC‑MS/MS with reporting limits in low ppt for PFOS and other targets.
- Environmental media: Up to 40 PFAS using Method 1633, validated across many sample types.
- Overlap: Methods 533 and 537.1 share 14 PFAS so utilities can align results across programs.
Do you need PFAS testing? Decision triggers and risk screen
Decision tree: when to test your water
Do you have a private well?
Yes → Is your well near a military base, airport, industrial site, landfill, or fire training area (within ~10 miles)?
Yes → Test now (Method 533 or 537.1). PFAS water testing helps identify both long-chain and short-chain chemicals that may be present in your well.
No → Have you seen regional PFAS notices, flood damage, or land‑use changes?
Yes → Test now or within 3 months.
No → Screen every 1–2 years or during property sale/new well.
Are you on public water?
Yes → Check your Consumer Confidence Report and utility PFAS notices.
If PFAS are detected or under study → Require public drinking water systems to monitor key PFAS compounds with strict limits.; test at home if you need private confirmation.
If no PFAS listed → No urgent action, but consider testing if you live near known sources or you are concerned about PFAS exposure.
Installing or using treatment (GAC/IX/RO)?
Yes → Test pre‑ and post‑filter at 1–3 months, then every 6 months.
People Also Ask: Who should test for PFAS and how often?
- Private well owners in higher‑risk areas: Annually, or after flooding, drought, or a nearby spill. Test now, especially if the well water is near airports, landfills, or manufacturing sites.
- Public water systems: Follow federal and state schedules (e.g., UCMR 5 through 2025 and new PFAS MCL requirements).
- After installing treatment (GAC, ion exchange, reverse osmosis): 1–3 months post‑install, then every 6 months to track breakthrough.
Regional signals and public notices
- Check state databases and local advisories for known PFAS detections.
- Read the Consumer Confidence Report for your city water.
- Community forums and local news may flag new issues. Verify with official notices before acting.

Approved PFAS testing methods and standards (2025)
EPA Method 533 vs. 537.1 for drinking water
| Feature | Method 533 | Method 537.1 |
| Typical use | Drinking water | Drinking water |
| PFAS count | 25 PFAS | 18 PFAS |
| QA approach | Includes isotope dilution for many targets | Uses internal standards; strong for legacy PFAS |
| Strengths | Short‑ and long‑chain PFAS coverage, low ppt | Legacy focus; strong performance |
| Overlap | Shares 14 PFAS with 537.1 | Shares 14 PFAS with 533 |
| Compliance | Accepted for UCMR 5 and state programs | Accepted for UCMR 5 and state programs |
Method 1633 and 1621 for non‑drinking water
- EPA Method 1633: First validated multi‑matrix method for 40 PFAS compounds across wastewater, surface water, groundwater, soil, sediment, biosolids, and fish tissue. It is being adopted in NPDES permits and federal programs.
- EPA Method 1621: Measures adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) as an indicator of fluorinated organics. It is best used as a screen for non‑potable water to guide targeted PFAS analysis.
Quality assurance, detection limits, and chain of custody
- LC‑MS/MS with isotope dilution improves accuracy at ppt levels.
- Chain of custody (COC) paperwork is required for defensible data in regulatory or legal settings.
- Containers/preservatives: Avoid PTFE/Teflon and fluorinated materials. Use lab‑supplied bottles to prevent contamination.
- Field blanks and duplicates help spot contamination and verify precision.
How to get your water tested: labs, sampling, and shipping
Choosing a certified lab
- Ask for accreditation by method and matrix (e.g., 533, 537.1, 1633, 1621).
- Confirm reporting limits (ppt), units (ng/L), turnaround time (TAT), and QA/QC package.
- Request a sample report. Look for easy comparison to MCLs and clear flags.
- Verify shipping instructions, cold pack needs, and COC steps.
- Clarify cost ranges and what is included: bottle kit, shipping, QA summary, potential confirmatory testing.
Step‑by‑step sample collection (homeowner and utility checklists)
Before sampling
Read the lab’s instructions.
Do not use Teflon tape, waterproof mascara, fluorinated pans, or fluorinated food wrappers near the sample.
Wash hands with plain soap; avoid hand sanitizers during sampling.
Use cold water unless the lab says otherwise.
Collecting the sample
Remove aerators if requested.
For a first‑draw sample, do not flush. For flushed sampling, run water 2–3 minutes.
Open the lab‑supplied bottle; do not touch the inside of cap or bottle.
Fill to the mark. Cap tightly.
Label the bottle with date/time and sample point (e.g., kitchen tap).
Complete the chain of custody form.
Packing and shipping
Place samples in a cooler with ice packs. Keep at ≤6°C per instructions.
Ship overnight, early in the week, to avoid weekend delays.
Keep copies of the COC and tracking.
- Do: Use lab bottles, keep sample cold, ship fast, complete COC.
- Don’t: Use Teflon tape, touch inside of bottle, sample near fluorinated products, delay shipment.
People Also Ask: How much does PFAS testing cost?
- Drinking water (Method 537.1, ~18 PFAS): $200–$400 per sample.
- Drinking water (Method 533, ~25 PFAS): $250–$550 per sample.
- Non‑potable (Method 1633, up to 40 PFAS): $350–$800+ per sample depending on matrix and QA package.
- Extras: Shipping on ice ($30–$80), field blanks/duplicates ($50–$150 each), rush TAT (add 20–100%).
- Planning tips: Budget for resampling if results are near the reporting limit, or if you install a filter and want to confirm removal.
Step 1: Choose panel
537.1 (18 PFAS): enter $____
533 (25 PFAS): enter $____
1633 (40 PFAS): enter $____
Step 2: Add extras
Shipping: $____
Field blank/duplicate: $____
Rush fee: $____
Step 3: Total estimated PFAS test cost = Step 1 + Step 2
Home PFAS test kits vs. certified lab testing
Accuracy, scope, and use cases
Home PFAS test kits
Good for screening awareness and quick checks.
Often cover a small panel (e.g., 6 PFAS, 18 PFAS, or 24 PFAS).
Detection limits may be higher than compliance needs.
Results are not valid for legal, health, or regulatory compliance.
Certified laboratories
Use EPA‑recognized methods (533, 537.1, 1633, 1621).
Provide defensible results, low ppt detection, and QA/QC documentation.
Needed to set treatment, meet MCLs, and report under Safe Drinking Water Act programs.
Pros and cons summary
| Option | Pros | Cons | Best for |
| Home PFAS test kit | Lower upfront cost; simple process; quick screening | Limited PFAS list; higher detection limits; not for compliance; risk of false reassurance | Personal curiosity; early screening before lab testing |
| Certified lab testing | Accurate ppt detection; EPA methods; defensible data; supports treatment and compliance | Higher cost; more steps (COC, shipping); longer TAT | Compliance, treatment design, real decisions, property transactions |
Can I test PFAS in bottled water or filters at home?
- Yes. Ask a certified lab to provide the right bottles and instructions for your matrix (bottled water, post‑filter).
- Collect paired samples: one before the filter and one after. This shows the removal efficiency.
- Make sure your sampling lines, faucet, and bottles are PFAS‑safe (no Teflon).

Interpreting PFAS lab reports and MCLs
Reading results: units, reporting limits, and QA/QC
Units: ng/L is the same as parts per trillion (ppt).
Key terms
MDL: method detection limit.
RL or PQL: reporting limit or practical quantitation limit.
ND: non‑detect (not found above MDL).
“<RL”: detected below the reporting limit; estimate.
J‑flag: estimated result with higher uncertainty.
Check QA/QC
Surrogate and isotope recoveries within method ranges.
Lab blanks should be clean.
Field blanks help spot contamination during collection.
What is a safe level of PFAS in drinking water?
PFOA: 4 ppt (MCL)
PFOS: 4 ppt (MCL)
PFNA: 10 ppt (MCL)
PFHxS: 10 ppt (MCL)
HFPO‑DA (GenX): 10 ppt (MCL)
There is also a Hazard Index (HI) of 1.0 for any mixture that includes two or more of: PFHxS, PFNA, HFPO‑DA, PFBS. Some states also set their own drinking water standards, which may be more stringent. Always check your state health or environmental agency. Note: Reporting limits for PFOS are commonly in the low ppt range, so a ppt for PFOS result is meaningful for compliance.
Example report walkthrough (drinking water and groundwater)
Header: Method (533 or 537.1), lab ID, sample date/time, matrix.
Analyte table: PFAS name, result (ng/L), RL, MDL, flags (J, U, <).
Compare to MCLs: Mark any result ≥ MCL in bold.
QA/QC section: Surrogate recoveries, blanks, duplicates.
How to read overlap: If you used 537.1 but want compounds that are only in 533, ask the lab to run 533 or add those targets.
After the results: treatment, retesting, and reporting
If PFAS are detected
Confirm: If results are near the reporting limit, request confirmatory testing.
Notify: Contact your local health/environment agency if results exceed MCLs.
Short‑term action: Switch to bottled water for drinking and infant formula if levels exceed health guidelines.
Plan: Consider point‑of‑use (POU) or whole‑home treatment depending on use and PFAS levels.
Water treatment technologies that work for PFAS
Granular activated carbon (GAC)
Removes many PFAS, especially long‑chain types (e.g., PFOS).
Needs periodic replacement based on usage and water quality.
Ion exchange (IX) resins
Strong removal for short‑ and long‑chain PFAS.
Monitor for breakthrough and regenerate or replace per vendor guidance.
Reverse osmosis (RO)
Effective POU method. Often used at the kitchen sink.
Add prefiltration if your water has sediment or chlorine.
Retesting cadence and compliance notifications
- After installation: Retest at 1–3 months.
- Ongoing: Retest every 6 months; adjust based on flow and lab data.
- Utilities: Follow federal and state reporting/notification rules for public water systems.
- Private wells: Keep records for future property sales and health discussions.

Market trends, case studies, and public awareness
Case study: Parkersburg, WV and a national wake‑up
Adoption curve: UCMR 5 and 2025 standards
- UCMR 5 expanded PFAS monitoring in public water systems through 2025.
- Labs grew capacity for Method 533 and 537.1 in drinking water and 1633 in environmental media. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), these methods are currently the standard for PFAS water testing and ensure accurate detection at very low levels.
- Non‑potable monitoring now includes up to 40 PFAS compounds as standard testing options.
Social and video content: education and mobilization
- YouTube and webinars: Tutorials on how to test for PFAS in water, sampling steps, and how to read water test results.
- Community forums: People share experiences like “test my water for PFAS” and ask what to do after a PFAS water test.
- This shared content helps families and local leaders test your water, compare water filter options, and push for clean public water systems.
Comparing PFAS testing providers (what competitors miss)
What to compare when selecting a lab
- Accreditation by method and matrix (533, 537.1, 1633, 1621).
- Detection limits and expanded panels (short‑chain, precursors).
- Turnaround time (TAT) options and rush fees.
- Data deliverables: Clear PDFs, CSV, and electronic data deliverables (EDD) if needed.
- Customer support: Sampling help, report walkthroughs, and post‑test guidance.
- Price transparency: Written quotes, clear line items, and contingency for confirmatory testing.
Gaps in current comparison content
- Few pages share real price ranges and TAT by matrix.
- Lack of annotated reports or sample collection SOPs you can print.
- Limited decision aids like risk screeners and cost estimators.
Suggested tools to outperform competitors
| Lab | Accreditation (533/537.1/1633/1621) | Matrices | Reporting Limits (ppt) | TAT (days) | Cost per sample ($) | Rush fee | QA/QC package included? | Support (sampling/report review) |
| Lab A | ||||||||
| Lab B | ||||||||
| Lab C |
- Which EPA method fits my water source?
- What PFAS are included in your panel (e.g., 18 PFAS, 24 PFAS, 25 PFAS, or 40 PFAS)?
- What are your reporting limits for PFOS and PFOA?
- What is the TAT and shipping plan?
- Do you provide an MCL comparison in the report?
Calls to action
- Request a lab quote with method, panel, TAT, and full costs.
- Download and print the checklist and worksheet sections.
- Compare labs before you buy.
- Book a consultation with your local health or environmental agency if PFAS are detected.
