City of Eden Prairie
Home Menu2024 Drinking Water Report
Each year, the City of Eden Prairie issues the results of monitoring done on its drinking water to advance consumers’ understanding of drinking water and heighten awareness of the need to protect precious water resources.
The monitoring results in this report cover the period from Jan. 1 through Dec. 31, 2024.
To reduce the environmental impact of producing this report, the City of Eden Prairie provides the annual Drinking Water Report in an online version only.
Water Quality Monitoring Results
The City works with the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) to test drinking water for more than 100 contaminants. It is not unusual to detect contaminants in small amounts. No water supply is ever completely free of contaminants. Drinking water standards protect Minnesotans from substances that may be harmful to their health.
Regulated Substances
Lead and Copper (Tested at Customer Taps)
| Contaminant
(date, if sampled in previous year) |
EPA's Ideal Goal (MCLG) | EPA's AL | 90% of Results Were Less Than |
Homes with High Levels |
Range of Detected Test Results | Violation | Typical Sources |
| Lead (7/14/22) | 0 | 90% of homes less than 15 ppb | 0.93 ppb | 0 out of 30 | 0-5.4 ppb | No | Corrosion of household plumbing |
| Copper (7/14/22) | 0 | 90% of homes less than 1.3 ppm | 0.01 ppm | 0 out of 30 | 0-.02 ppm | No | Corrosion of household plumbing |
If present, elevated levels of lead can cause serious health problems, especially for pregnant women and young children. You may be in contact with lead through paint, water, dust, soil, food, hobbies or your job. There is no safe level of lead.
Lead in drinking water is primarily from materials and components associated with service lines and home plumbing. The City of Eden Prairie is responsible for providing high quality drinking water and removing lead pipes from service lines, but cannot control the variety of materials used in plumbing components.
Find more information about protecting yourself from lead in drinking water at the bottom of this report.
Inorganic and Organic Contaminants (Tested in Drinking Water)
| Contaminant (date, if sampled in previous year) |
EPA's Ideal Goal (MCLG) | EPA's Limit (MCL) | Highest Average or Highest Single Test Result | Range | Violation | Typical Sources |
| Barium (7/27/20) | 2 ppm | 2 ppm | 0.03 ppm | N/A | No | Discharge of drilling wastes; discharge from metal refineries; erosion of natural deposit. |
| Cis-1,2- Dichloroethene (cis-1,2-dichloroethylene) |
70 ppb | 70 ppb | 0.62 ppb | N/A | No | Discharge from chemical and agricultural chemical factories. |
Contaminants Related to Disinfection (Tested in Drinking Water)
| Substance (date, if sampled in previous year) |
EPA's Ideal Goal (MCLG) | EPA's Limit (MCL) | Highest Average or Highest Single Test Result | Range | Violation | Typical Sources |
| Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs) | N/A | 80 ppb | 57.9 ppb | 41.10–57.9 ppb | No | Byproduct of drinking water disinfection. |
| Total Haloacetic Acids (HAA)* | N/A | 60 ppb | 7.3 ppb | 5–7.3 ppb | No | Byproduct of drinking water disinfection. |
| Total Chlorine | 4 ppm | 4 ppm | 1.06 ppm | 0.85–1.2 ppm | No | Water additive used to control microbes. |
*Total HAA refers to HAA5
Other Substances (Tested in Drinking Water)
| Substance (date, if sampled in previous year) |
EPA's Ideal Goal (MCLG) | EPA's Limit (MCL) | Highest Average or Highest Single Test Result | Range | Violation | Typical Sources |
| Flouride | 4 ppm | 4 ppm | 0.59 ppm | 0.54–0.58 ppm | No | Erosion of natural deposits; water additive to promote strong teeth. |
Fluoride is nature's cavity fighter, with small amounts present naturally in many drinking water sources. There is an overwhelming of credible, peer-reviewed, scientific evidence that fluoridation reduces tooth decay and cavities in children and adults, even when there is availability of fluoride from other sources, such as fluoride toothpaste and mouth rinses. Since studies show that optimal fluoride levels in drinking water benefit public health, municipal community water systems adjust the level of fluoride in the water to an optimal concentration between 0.5 to 0.9 parts per million (ppm) to protect your teeth. Fluoride levels below 2.0 ppm are not expected to increase the risk of a cosmetic condition known as enamel fluorosis.
Unregulated Substances
In addition to testing drinking water for contaminants regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act, the City sometimes also monitors for contaminants that are not regulated. Unregulated contaminants do not have legal limits for drinking water. MDH, EPA and other health agencies may have developed comparison values for some of these compounds. Some of these comparison values are based solely on potential health impacts and do not consider the City's ability to measure contaminants at very low concentrations nor the cost and technology of prevention and/or treatment. These values may be set at levels that are costly, challenging or impractical for a water system to meet (for example, large-scale treatment technology may not exist for a given contaminant). Sample data are listed along with comparison values in the table below; it is important to note that these comparisons values are not enforceable.
Detection alone of a regulated or unregulated contaminant should not cause concern. The meaning of a detection should be determined considering current health effects information. We are often still learning about the health effects, so this information can change over time.
A person drinking water with a contaminant at or below the comparison value would be at little to no risk for harmful health effects. If the level of a contaminant is above the comparison value, people of a certain age or with special health conditions-like a fetus, infants, children, elderly, and people with impaired immunity—may need to take extra precautions. We are notifying you of the unregulated contaminants we have detected as a public education opportunity.
In the past year, Eden Prairie's drinking water may have tested for additional unregulated contaminants as part of the Fifth Unregulated Contaminant Monitory Rule (UCMR 5) and results are still being processed. The UCMR 5 Datafinder allows people to easily search for, summarize and download the available UCMR 5 analytical results.
Unregulated Contaminants (Tested in Drinking Water)
| Contaminant |
Comparison Value | Highest Average Result or Highest Single Test Result | Range of Detected Test Results |
| Manganese (2020) | 100 ppb | 1.52 ppb | N/A |
| Sodium* | 20 ppm | 11.4 ppm | N/A |
| Sulfate | 500 ppm | 25.3 ppm | N/A |
| Perfluorobutanoic Acid (PFBA) | 7000 ppt | 11.7 ppt | 10.7 -12.7 ppt |
More Information
- MDH’s A-Z List of Contaminants in Water
- Fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4)
- Fifth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule
- EPA UCMR5 Program Overview Fact Sheet
Key to Abbreviations
AL — Action Level: The concentration of a contaminant which, if exceeded, triggers treatment or other requirement which a water system must follow.
MCL — Maximum Contaminant Level: The highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. MCLs are set as close to the MCLGs as feasible using the best available treatment technology.
MCLG — Maximum Contaminant Level Goal: The level of a contaminant in drinking water below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MCLGs allow for a margin of safety.
MRDL — Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level: The highest level of a disinfectant allowed in drinking water. There is convincing evidence that the addition of a disinfectant is necessary for control of microbial contaminants.
MRDLG — Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level Goal: The level of a drinking water disinfectant below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MRDLGs do not reflect the benefits of the use of disinfectants to control microbial contaminants.
N/A — Not Applicable (does not apply).
ppt — Parts per trillion: One part per trillion in water is like one drop in one trillion drops of water, or about one drop in a swimming pool. This can also be expressed as nanograms per liter (ng/l).
ppb — Parts per billion: One part per billion in water is like one drop in one billion drops of water, or about one drop in a swimming pool. This can also be expressed as micrograms per liter (ug/l).
ppm — Parts per million: One part per million in water is like one drop in one million drops of water, or about one cup in a swimming pool. This can also be expressed as milligrams per liter (mg/l).
PWSID — Public water system identification.
