Testosterone in Drinking Water: Complete Guide (2026)

By Echo Water Research Team 5 min read
Testosterone in Drinking Water: Complete Guide (2026)

Testosterone in Drinking Water

Found in 51 water systems • other

Updated March 2026 • Data from EWG & EPA

51
Water Systems Affected
0
Above EWG Guideline
15,358,802
People Affected

What is Testosterone and Why Does It Matter?

Testosterone in Tap Water: What You Need to Know

Testosterone is a natural hormone produced by humans and animals. Most people think of it as something made by the body — not something found in drinking water. But testosterone has been detected in 51 water systems across the United States, at concentrations averaging 0.044 parts per trillion (ppt) and reaching as high as 0.275 ppt. It enters the water supply primarily through human and animal waste. Farms, feedlots, and even suburban households contribute to this. When people or livestock excrete hormones, those compounds flow into wastewater systems or runoff into nearby waterways. Standard municipal water treatment wasn't designed to remove hormones, so trace amounts can pass through.

The health picture around testosterone in water is still developing, but researchers have reason to pay attention. Testosterone belongs to a broader class of compounds called endocrine disruptors — chemicals that can interfere with the body's hormonal system. Even at very low levels, some studies suggest these compounds may affect reproductive development, particularly in children and developing fetuses. The Environmental Working Group (EWG) notes that hormone-active substances can disrupt normal biological signaling at concentrations far below what traditional toxicology would consider dangerous. That said, the amounts currently detected in U.S. water supplies are extremely small. No systems in this dataset exceeded established health guidelines. Still, long-term, low-level exposure is an area scientists continue to study closely.

Regulation hasn't caught up with the science here. The EPA does not currently set a legal limit — called a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) — for testosterone or most other hormones in drinking water. That means water utilities aren't required to test for it or remove it. The EWG has flagged hormones as an emerging concern, but formal health guidelines specific to testosterone in water remain limited. This regulatory gap is common with newer categories of contaminants. Just because a substance lacks a legal limit doesn't mean it's harmless. It often just means the science is newer and the regulatory process moves slowly.

Geographically, California leads this dataset with testosterone detected in 10 water systems, followed by Illinois with 9, Pennsylvania and Indiana with 4 each, and Michigan with 3. These patterns aren't random. States with large agricultural industries — particularly those with concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) — tend to show higher rates of hormone detection in water. California's massive dairy and livestock sector contributes significant hormone load to local waterways. Illinois and Indiana sit in the heart of the Corn Belt, where large-scale hog and cattle farming is common. Pennsylvania's mix of agricultural runoff and dense suburban development adds another layer of exposure risk. Urban wastewater treatment plants in these states also process large volumes of human waste, which contains naturally excreted hormones.

The good news is that effective filtration options exist. Reverse osmosis (RO) is the most reliable method for removing hormones from drinking water. A quality RO system can remove up to 99% of endocrine-disrupting compounds, including testosterone. Activated carbon filtration also helps, particularly when combined with RO. Standard pitcher filters and basic faucet attachments are generally not effective against hormones at trace levels. If you live in California, Illinois, Indiana, Pennsylvania, or Michigan — or anywhere near large agricultural operations — it's worth taking your filtration setup seriously. Echo Water's reverse osmosis systems are built specifically to address contaminants like these that standard treatment misses. Testing your water first is always a smart starting point. Knowing what's actually in your water lets you choose the right solution rather than guessing.

Regulatory Standards for Testosterone

Standard Level Notes
Average Detected Level 0.04 ppt Across all tested systems
Highest Detected Level 0.28 ppt Worst-case system

Cities With the Highest Testosterone Levels

# City Detected Level People Served
1 Syracuse, NY 0.28 ppt 512,329
2 Clifton, NJ 0.24 ppt 310,483
3 Gracemont, OK 0.14 ppt 336
4 Knoxville, TN 0.13 ppt 242,383
5 Wheaton, IL 0.12 ppt 52,894
6 Orland Park, IL 0.11 ppt 58,862
7 Porterville, CA 0.08 ppt 62,988
8 Port Aransas, TX 0.07 ppt 14,880
9 Louisburg, KS 0.07 ppt 4,994
10 Hamburg, PA 0.06 ppt 0
11 Watertown, NY 0.06 ppt 29,406
12 St. Clair, MI 0.05 ppt 3,270
13 Chester, PA 0.05 ppt 140,437
14 Griffith, IN 0.05 ppt 16,893
15 Lagrange, IL 0.04 ppt 475

Concerned about Testosterone?

Check if your water is affected with a free personalized report.

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How to Remove Testosterone From Your Water

Testosterone is a lipophilic steroid hormone that may partially adsorb to activated carbon but is not reliably removed; basic pitcher filters have no significant removal capacity and bioaccumulation on filters may occur.

Standard pitcher filters and carbon-only filters do not reliably remove Testosterone. A reverse osmosis system with NSF/ANSI 58 certification is the most reliable solution.

Reverse osmosis is required for reliable testosterone removal; activated carbon provides only partial removal; advanced oxidation methods (ozone, UV+H₂O₂) effectively degrade steroid hormones.

Echo RO System

Removes Testosterone and 99.9% of other contaminants. The gold standard for drinking water purification.

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Echo Hydrogen Water Flask

Once your water is clean, supercharge it with molecular hydrogen for antioxidant benefits.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Testosterone in my drinking water?

Testosterone was detected in 51 water systems across the US. Check your city's water quality report to see if it affects your water supply.

What are the health effects of Testosterone in water?

Testosterone has been associated with various health concerns at elevated levels. The EWG has set health guidelines that are typically stricter than EPA legal limits.

Which city has the most Testosterone in its water?

Based on our analysis, Syracuse, NY has the highest detected levels of Testosterone in its water supply.

How do I remove Testosterone from my water?

Reverse osmosis (RO) systems are generally the most effective at removing this contaminant. Check the filtration recommendations section for specific guidance.

Data sources: Environmental Working Group (EWG) Tap Water Database, U.S. EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS)

Last updated: March 2026

Methodology: Contaminant levels are compared against both EPA legal limits (Maximum Contaminant Levels) and EWG health guidelines, which are often stricter and based on the latest scientific research.

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