Glyphosate in Drinking Water
Found in 33 water systems • pesticides
Updated March 2026 • Data from EWG & EPA
What is Glyphosate and Why Does It Matter?
Glyphosate is the active ingredient in Roundup, one of the most widely used weed killers in the world. Farmers spray it on corn, soybeans, wheat, and dozens of other crops to control weeds before and after harvest. Rain carries it off fields and into streams, rivers, and groundwater — which often feed the same municipal systems that supply your tap water. It has now been detected in 33 water systems across the United States, with an average concentration of 1.907 parts per billion (ppb) and a peak level of 6.0 ppb.
The health concerns around glyphosate have grown significantly over the past decade. In 2015, the World Health Organization's cancer research agency classified it as "probably carcinogenic to humans," meaning there is credible evidence linking it to cancer in animal studies and some human research. More recent studies have focused on non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a type of blood cancer, as a potential risk at higher exposure levels. Beyond cancer, some research suggests glyphosate may disrupt hormone function and harm gut bacteria, though scientists are still studying these effects. Children are considered more vulnerable than adults because their bodies are still developing and they consume more water relative to their body weight.
Here is where the regulatory picture gets complicated. The EPA sets the legal limit for glyphosate in drinking water at 700 ppb — a number so high that most detections look harmless by comparison. But the Environmental Working Group (EWG) sets its own health guideline at just 1 ppb, based on a more conservative reading of the cancer risk data. Of the 33 systems where glyphosate was detected, 4 tested above that 1 ppb EWG guideline. That gap between 1 ppb and 700 ppb is not a small rounding difference — it is a 700-fold difference in what different authorities consider acceptable. The EPA's limit was last updated decades ago and has not fully incorporated newer cancer research. For families trying to make informed decisions, the EWG guideline is the more protective benchmark to use.
Geographically, glyphosate detections follow the country's agricultural map closely. Iowa leads with 17 affected systems — no surprise given that the state sits at the heart of the Corn Belt, where glyphosate use per acre is among the highest in the nation. Florida accounts for 10 affected systems, reflecting heavy herbicide use in its sugar cane fields and citrus groves. South Carolina, Georgia, and New Hampshire each reported 1 affected system. The Iowa concentration is particularly worth watching. Heavy spring rains wash glyphosate from recently treated fields into waterways before treatment plants can fully address the spike. Rural water systems with limited filtration infrastructure are often the most exposed.
The good news is that effective filtration options exist. Activated carbon filters can reduce glyphosate levels, but the most reliable protection comes from reverse osmosis (RO) filtration. A quality reverse osmosis system forces water through a semi-permeable membrane with pores small enough to block glyphosate molecules, removing up to 99% of the herbicide from your drinking water. Echo Water's reverse osmosis systems are designed specifically for this kind of whole-contaminant protection, addressing glyphosate alongside other agricultural chemicals, heavy metals, and disinfection byproducts in a single system. If you are on a municipal system in Iowa or Florida — or anywhere with significant farming activity nearby — an RO filter at your kitchen tap is a straightforward and proven step. Check your annual water quality report (called a Consumer Confidence Report) to see whether your utility tests for glyphosate. Many do not, which makes home filtration an even smarter precaution.
Regulatory Standards for Glyphosate
| Standard | Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| EWG Health Guideline | 5 ppb | Stricter, based on latest science |
| EPA Legal Limit (MCL) | 700 ppb | Legally enforceable standard |
| Average Detected Level | 1.91 ppb | Across all tested systems |
| Highest Detected Level | 6 ppb | Worst-case system |
Cities With the Highest Glyphosate Levels
| # | City | Detected Level | People Served |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hobe Sound, FL | 6 ppb | 450 |
| 2 | Okeechobee, FL | 6 ppb | 132 |
| 3 | Micco, FL | 5.90 ppb | 55 |
| 4 | Zephyrhills, FL | 5.90 ppb | 130 |
| 5 | Titusville, FL | 4.20 ppb | 90 |
| 6 | Huxley, IA | 3.26 ppb | 4,244 |
| 7 | Chuluota, FL | 2.95 ppb | 3,863 |
| 8 | Dyersville, IA | 2.46 ppb | 4,477 |
| 9 | Traer, IA | 2.39 ppb | 1,583 |
| 10 | Villisca, IA | 2.06 ppb | 1,132 |
| 11 | Moorhead, IA | 1.99 ppb | 0 |
| 12 | Center Point, IA | 1.97 ppb | 0 |
| 13 | Montezuma, IA | 1.80 ppb | 1,545 |
| 14 | Sumner, IA | 1.79 ppb | 2,030 |
| 15 | Rock Rapids, IA | 1.74 ppb | 1,765 |
States Most Affected by Glyphosate
How to Remove Glyphosate From Your Water
Standard activated carbon filters have low affinity for glyphosate's polar structure; pitcher filters and basic fridge filters cannot reliably remove it. Reverse osmosis is the primary effective method.
Standard pitcher filters and carbon-only filters do not reliably remove Glyphosate. A reverse osmosis system with NSF/ANSI 58 certification is the most reliable solution.
Glyphosate requires reverse osmosis (90–99% removal) or specialized activated carbon pre-treatment; basic carbon filters remove <20%.
Echo RO System
Removes Glyphosate and 99.9% of other contaminants. The gold standard for drinking water purification.
View RO SystemsEcho Hydrogen Water Flask
Once your water is clean, supercharge it with molecular hydrogen for antioxidant benefits.
Shop Hydrogen FlaskFrequently Asked Questions
Is Glyphosate in my drinking water?
Glyphosate was detected in 33 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 Glyphosate in water?
Glyphosate 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 Glyphosate in its water?
Based on our analysis, Hobe Sound, FL has the highest detected levels of Glyphosate in its water supply.
How do I remove Glyphosate from my water?
Reverse osmosis (RO) systems are generally the most effective at removing this contaminant. Check the filtration recommendations section for specific guidance.
Related Contaminant Guides
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.