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Public Drinking Water Systems Programs
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Public Drinking Water Systems:
Facts and Figures

For more detailed statistics on public drinking water systems and violations of drinking water rules, read Factoids: Drinking Water & Ground Water Statistics or investigate getting access to drinking water data.

There are approximately 155,000 public water systems in the United States.  EPA classifies these water systems according to the number of people they serve, the source of their water, and whether they serve the same customers year-round or on an occasional basis.  The following statistics are based on information in the Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS), for the fiscal year ended September 2008, as reported to EPA by the states. 

Classifications:

Public water systems provide water for human consumption through pipes or other constructed conveyances to at least 15 service connections or serves an average of at least 25 people for at least 60 days a year. EPA has defined three types of public water systems:

  • Community Water System (CWS): A public water system that supplies water to the same population year-round. 
  • Non-Transient Non-Community Water System (NTNCWS): A public water system that regularly supplies water to at least 25 of the same people at least six months per year, but not year-round. Some examples are schools, factories, office buildings, and hospitals which have their own water systems.
  • Transient Non-Community Water System (TNCWS): A public water system that provides water in a place such as a gas station or campground where people do not remain for long periods of time.
EPA also classifies water systems according to the number of people they serve: 
  • Very Small water systems serve 25-500 people
  • Small water systems serve 501-3,300 people
  • Medium water systems serve 3,301-10,000 people
  • Large water systems serve 10,001-100,000 people
  • Very Large water systems serve 100,001+ people
Number of Systems and Population Served for 2000:
(note:  populations are not summed because some people are served by multiple systems and counted more than once)
  • 51,988 CWS served 292.3 million people
  • 18,742 NTNCWS served 6.3 million people
  • 84,149 TNCWS served 13.6 million people 
Community Water System (CWS) :

Source of water:

  • 11,671 systems relied on surface water, serving 204.1 million people 
  • 40,301 systems relied on ground water, serving 88.1 million people 
System size:
  • 22% of CWS are very large, large, or medium, serving 70% of  those who get their water from a CWS 
  • 78% of CWS are small or very small, serving 30% of those who get their water from a CWS 
Non-Transient Non-Community Water System (NTNCWS) :

Source of water:

  • 688 systems relied on surface water, serving 788,360 people 
  • 18,041 systems relied on ground water, serving 5.5 million people 
System size:
  • 96% of NTNCWS are small or very small, serving 87% of those served by NTNCWS 
  • 4% of NTNCWS are medium, large, or very large, serving 13% of those served by NTNCWS 
Transient Non-Community Water Systems (TNCWS) : 

Source of water:

  • 2,010 systems relied on surface water, serving 2,534,900 people 
  • 82,126 systems relied on ground water, serving 11 million people 
System size:
  • 98% TNCWS are small or very small, serving 81% of those served by TNCWS 
  • 2% of TNCWS are medium, large, or very large, serving 19% of those served by TNCWS

More on public drinking water systems

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