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What you need to know about the safety threats of PFAS, lead, and other contaminants in your drinking water, from the experts at Consumer Reports.
Many Americans still drink water with unhealthy levels of toxic chemicals, heavy metals, bacteria, and other contaminants. Here’s how to test and clean your drinking water.
To help you know what's really in your bottled water, Consumer Reports tested 47 bottled waters, including 35 noncarbonated and 12 carbonated ones.
In their testing, Consumer Reports found that Deer Park was one of two waters that exceeded a 1 part per trillion level for PFAS.
I tried 17 different bottled water brands and found that the best ones were, unfortunately, more expensive, but worth it. Dasani, was, of course, the worst.
The study concluded that four (yes, only four) bottled water brands have a pH and fluoride level completely safe for your teeth: Fiji, “Just Water,” Deer Park Natural Spring Water, and Evamor.
Which bottled water is the safest to drink? Consumer Reports tests sparkling, carbonated and noncarbonated water and finds toxic PFAS chemicals in some brands.
Last updated on October 9, 2024. A Web site to support the implementation of the Consumer Confidence Reports (CCR) and the public's access to drinking water quality reports.
Investigative work by Consumer Reports and The Guardian—a winner of Fast Company's 2022 World Changing Ideas Awards—showed abundant pollutants in tap water across the U.S.
To find the right report, check your bottled water label for the water source and type of water and match it to what’s listed below. Then click on the link to download the PDF.