Chester County, Pennsylvania: drinking water report. Chester County lies west of Philadelphia, home to about 540,000 residents.
Chester County lies west of Philadelphia, home to about 540,000 residents. Water comes from multiple providers – Aqua Pennsylvania, the Chester Water Authority, and numerous small community systems – drawing from the Brandywine Creek, other surface sources, and local groundwater. The county is a mix of affluent suburbs, small towns, and active farmland, all of which influence water quality.
Chester County's water quality varies significantly by provider and source. Agricultural activity in the western part of the county contributes nitrate to shallow groundwater. UCMR5 data shows PFAS detections in several county systems, though at lower concentrations than in neighboring Montgomery and Bucks counties, which host former military PFAS sources.
According to the Pennsylvania DEP's 2024 monitoring data, two Chester County water systems reported PFAS above state-proposed MCLs. The county does not have the concentrated military contamination seen in its neighbors, but diffuse PFAS from commercial and industrial sources is still present.
Chester County benefits from the absence of major military PFAS sources, but agricultural contamination and general PFAS presence are still worth tracking.
Check your water for data specific to your provider. For nitrate in rural areas, reverse osmosis is the most effective treatment. For PFAS, activated carbon or RO both work. Our water filter guide covers both scenarios. Pull your detailed report, and visit our Pennsylvania page for statewide data.