Kent County, Michigan: drinking water report. Kent County – Grand Rapids – serves about 660,000 residents.
Kent County – Grand Rapids – serves about 660,000 residents. The City of Grand Rapids draws from Lake Michigan via a 31-mile pipeline to its treatment plant on the lakeshore. Suburban communities use a mix of Grand Rapids wholesale water and independent groundwater systems. The Lake Michigan connection gives Grand Rapids a reliable, high-quality source that many inland Michigan cities lack.
Grand Rapids' Lake Michigan supply is clean at the source and well-treated. Michigan's adoption of MCLs for seven PFAS compounds has driven monitoring across all systems. UCMR5 data shows low-level PFAS detections in some Kent County systems, primarily in those using supplemental groundwater. Wolverine World Wide's former manufacturing facility in neighboring Rockford (Cascade Township area) contaminated local groundwater with PFAS from Scotchgard-treated shoe waste – one of the most publicized industrial PFAS cases in Michigan.
According to Michigan EGLE's 2024 data, the Wolverine-related contamination plume has affected private wells in the northern part of Kent County. Public water systems have largely been connected to clean sources, but the plume remains an active investigation.
Grand Rapids city water is clean. The PFAS risk is concentrated in areas near the Wolverine contamination plume in the northern county.
Check your water for data specific to your area. If you are on a private well in northern Kent County, PFAS testing is strongly recommended. Our water filter guide covers effective treatment options. Pull your detailed report, and visit our Michigan page for statewide data.