Montgomery County borders Philadelphia to the northwest, serving about 840,000 residents.
Montgomery County borders Philadelphia to the northwest, serving about 840,000 residents. Water comes from multiple providers – Aqua Pennsylvania, the former Horsham Water and Sewer Authority, North Penn Water Authority, and several others – drawing from the Schuylkill River, local groundwater, and purchased Philadelphia Water Department supplies. The county's proximity to former military installations makes PFAS a defining water quality issue.
Montgomery County is ground zero for one of the most significant PFAS contamination events in the Mid-Atlantic. The former Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove and the Horsham Air Guard Station used AFFF extensively, contaminating groundwater that fed public and private drinking water wells across a wide area.
According to the Pennsylvania DEP, over a dozen public water systems in Montgomery County have detected PFAS above state-proposed MCLs. North Penn Water Authority spent over $20 million installing treatment to address PFAS in its wells. The Navy has funded alternative water connections for the most affected areas, but remediation of the groundwater plume will take decades.
If you are in the Horsham, Warminster, or Willow Grove area, PFAS contamination is well-documented and your utility has likely installed treatment. But treatment systems vary in effectiveness across different PFAS compounds.
Check your water for the latest monitoring data from your provider. A reverse osmosis system provides comprehensive household-level PFAS removal. Our water filter guide covers certified options. Pull your detailed report, and visit our Pennsylvania page for statewide patterns.