Is Our Drinking Water Safe?

TRUEPOINT FILTERS

What’s In Long Island Water?

Long Island water comes from underground aquifers, but that does not mean every home has the same water quality. Taste, odor, chlorine, PFAS concerns, hard water, iron, sediment, and other issues can vary by location, utility, and plumbing system.

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Long Island Water Is Local — Very Local

Your neighbor’s water may not be exactly like yours. Water quality can depend on your local water district, treatment methods, nearby environmental conditions, your home’s plumbing, and whether you are on municipal water or private well water.

Municipal Water

Most Long Island homes receive treated public water. This water is tested and treated, but homeowners may still notice taste, odor, chlorine, chloramines, hardness, or other concerns.

Private Wells

Private wells may have different concerns, including iron, manganese, sulfur odor, sediment, hardness, nitrates, and other location-specific issues.

Your Home Matters

Older piping, water heaters, fixtures, and plumbing conditions can also affect what you see, smell, and taste at the tap.

Common Long Island Water Concerns

Not every home has every issue. That is why water testing and proper system selection matter.

Chlorine

Chlorine is commonly used to disinfect public water. While important for safety, it can create a pool-like smell, unpleasant taste, and dry-feeling water.

Chloramines

Some water systems use chloramines as a disinfectant. Chloramines can be more persistent than chlorine and may require the right carbon filtration approach.

PFAS Concerns

PFAS, sometimes called “forever chemicals,” have become a major concern across Long Island. Public water suppliers are actively testing and treating for regulated PFAS compounds, but many homeowners still want an added layer of protection.

1,4-Dioxane

1,4-dioxane has been widely discussed in Long Island water quality conversations. It requires specialized treatment and is one reason homeowners are paying closer attention to drinking water.

Nitrates

Nitrates can be a concern in certain areas, especially where groundwater is affected by fertilizers, septic systems, or local environmental conditions.

Hard Water Minerals

Calcium and magnesium can contribute to scale buildup on fixtures, appliances, water heaters, shower doors, and plumbing surfaces.

Iron & Manganese

Iron and manganese can cause orange, brown, or black staining on fixtures and laundry. Some homes may also experience metallic taste.

Sediment

Sand, silt, rust particles, or other fine material can show up as cloudiness, grit, or particles in fixtures and filters.

Is Long Island Water Safe?

Public water is tested and treated according to regulatory standards. But “meets standards” and “ideal for your family’s taste, comfort, and peace of mind” are not always the same conversation.

Read Your Water Report

Public water suppliers issue water quality reports that explain where your water comes from, what is tested, and what was found in the system.

Test Your Home’s Water

A home water evaluation helps identify the issues that matter at your actual tap, not just at the municipal testing point.

Match The Right System

The right solution depends on the problem. Carbon filtration, iron filtration, softening, anti-scale treatment, and reverse osmosis all solve different issues.

Important:

No single filter solves every water problem. The best system depends on your water source, test results, household demand, plumbing conditions, and your goals.

Which TruePoint System Fits Your Home?

TruePoint Filters keeps the choices simple. Start with the problem, then choose the right solution.

TruePoint Essential

Whole-house iron filtration for rust stains, rotten egg odor, sulfur, manganese, sediment, and iron-related water problems.

View Essential

TruePoint Plus

Whole-house carbon filtration for improved taste, better odor, and reduction of chlorine and chloramine taste and odor.

View Plus

TruePoint Elite

Reverse osmosis drinking water filtration for advanced point-of-use drinking water treatment at the kitchen tap.

View Elite

Common Questions About Long Island Water

Why does my water smell like chlorine?

Chlorine or chloramines may be used for disinfection. A properly selected carbon filtration system may help reduce chlorine or chloramine taste and odor.

Why do I have orange stains?

Orange or brown staining is often associated with iron. A water test can help confirm whether iron is present and whether an iron filtration system is needed.

Do I need reverse osmosis?

Reverse osmosis is usually recommended for drinking water when homeowners want a higher level of point-of-use treatment for the kitchen sink.

Will one system fix everything?

Usually, no. Whole-house carbon, iron filtration, softening, anti-scale systems, and reverse osmosis each serve different purposes.

Find Out What’s In Your Water

Schedule your free consultation and let TruePoint Filters help you choose the right water treatment solution for your Long Island home.

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