Sample public water system records.
State Water Quality Hub
Texas public drinking water lookup
Texas is included as the sample state so the MVP can show state, city, and public water system templates without generating a national page set. This sample state hub shows how a statewide directory can connect systems, cities, reports, contaminants, guides, and official source context without claiming complete statewide coverage.
Find a Texas public water system
Start with a city, utility name, ZIP code, or PWSID, then confirm the serving system with an official source.
This state page uses sample records only. It does not include every Texas public water system.
Designed to scale from sample Texas data to imported official records.
Counts reflect available sample data, not all state systems.
State and EPA links should anchor future imported data.
This page does not say statewide water is safe or unsafe.
State Overview
What this state hub helps you do
State hubs should orient people, route them to public water system profiles, and explain where state-level source information comes from.
Browse public water systems
Use the directory to compare available system profiles by PWSID, city relationship, county relationship, source water type, and report year.
Find city context
Use city hubs as local entry points, then confirm the exact serving public water system.
Check sources and methods
Review source hierarchy, missing-data handling, and why annual reports are not live status pages.
Current Sample Data
Available records for this state template
These counts come from the local demo dataset. Future official imports should replace them with source-backed generated data.
City pages are navigation layers.
Context for systems and cities.
Evergreen national pages.
Water Systems
Public water systems currently in this sample state
System profiles hold the strongest data summaries. This directory should expand only as source-backed system records become available.
System-level profile for Schertz. Use it to review report-year context, source links, sample violation records, contaminant relationships, and limitations.
- System type
- Community water system
- Communities
- Schertz
- Counties
- Guadalupe County
- Latest sample CCR
- 2024
Annual reports are historical/reporting documents, not live status pages.
System-level profile for Schertz, Sample City. Use it to review report-year context, source links, sample violation records, contaminant relationships, and limitations.
- System type
- Community water system
- Communities
- Schertz, Sample City
- Counties
- Guadalupe County, Bexar County
- Latest sample CCR
- 2024
Annual reports are historical/reporting documents, not live status pages.
Cities
City entry points in current sample data
City hubs help people start locally, but they should not replace public water system profiles or address-level confirmation.
Official source path
Use official federal, state, utility, or report sources before treating a page as final.
Next Steps
Learn how to read the records behind this state
State hubs should link outward to evergreen education and task pages so users can interpret system-level data carefully.
Find My Water System
Start with a city, ZIP code, utility name, or PWSID, then confirm the serving public water system with official sources.
How to read a water quality report
A plain-English walkthrough of Consumer Confidence Reports, including report years, detected contaminants, legal limits, violations, and source notes.
Lead explainer
Lead can enter drinking water through plumbing materials and service lines. Reports may describe lead differently from other contaminants because lead is regulated with an action level rather than a simple maximum contaminant level.
Nitrate explainer
Nitrate may appear in reports when source water is influenced by fertilizer, septic systems, or other nitrogen sources.
Data sources
See how EPA, state, utility, report, and demo sources should be labeled and prioritized.