Plymouth County, MA Water Quality (2026): PFAS & Lead

Plymouth County, Massachusetts: drinking water report. Plymouth County on Massachusetts' South Shore has about 530,000 residents in communities from

Water Quality in Plymouth County, MA

Plymouth County on Massachusetts' South Shore has about 530,000 residents in communities from Brockton to Plymouth. Most water comes from surface reservoirs and groundwater wells, with each town operating its own water department or district. The county's proximity to military installations – the former South Weymouth Naval Air Station and Camp Edwards on nearby Cape Cod – and its industrial history create overlapping contamination concerns.

What the Data Shows

The former South Weymouth Naval Air Station, now the SouthField mixed-use development, has documented PFAS contamination from AFFF. According to Massachusetts DEP's 2024 investigation, monitoring wells at the former base show PFOS at 35 ppt, and the contamination plume extends into adjacent Weymouth and Rockland groundwater. Several water systems in the area have been affected.

Brockton's surface water supply from Silver Lake and reservoir systems has tested clean for PFAS, but disinfection byproducts from treating nutrient-rich reservoir water are a recurring theme. A 2024 DEP compliance report noted elevated haloacetic acid levels in the Brockton distribution system during summer months.

What Residents Should Do

Plymouth County's town-by-town water system structure means quality varies significantly depending on where you live. Systems near the former naval station face different challenges than those drawing from pristine South Shore reservoirs.

Check your water for data specific to your town and system. For disinfection byproducts, a carbon filter at the tap is effective. For PFAS, reverse osmosis adds the strongest protection. Our water filter guide covers both scenarios. Get your detailed report for local data, and visit our Massachusetts page for statewide context.