Riley County, KS Water Quality (2026): PFAS & Lead

Riley County, Kansas: drinking water report. Riley County in northeast Kansas has about 74,000 residents, with Manhattan – home to Kansas State University

Water Quality in Riley County, KS

Riley County in northeast Kansas has about 74,000 residents, with Manhattan – home to Kansas State University – as the primary city. The City of Manhattan draws from Tuttle Creek Lake and the Kansas River, with a treatment plant upgraded in recent years to handle the region's challenging source water. Fort Riley, a major Army installation, occupies a large portion of the county's western half.

What the Data Shows

Tuttle Creek Lake frequently experiences harmful algal blooms during summer and fall. According to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment's 2024 lake monitoring report, microcystin concentrations at the Manhattan intake exceeded 5 ug/L during September 2024 – well above the 1.6 ug/L health advisory for drinking water. Manhattan's treatment plant uses powdered activated carbon and enhanced oxidation to manage cyanotoxins during bloom season.

Fort Riley has confirmed PFAS contamination from AFFF firefighting foam. KDHE's 2024 PFAS investigation found PFOS at 28 ppt in monitoring wells near the base's fire training areas. The contamination affects groundwater in the area between Fort Riley and Manhattan, where some properties rely on private wells.

What Residents Should Do

Manhattan's water treatment handles algal toxins during bloom season, but the intensity of the blooms means the system operates under stress during late summer. A household carbon filter provides an extra buffer during peak bloom months.

Check your water for seasonal data. For cyanotoxins and PFAS, reverse osmosis addresses both. Our water filter guide covers systems suited to lake-sourced water in algal-bloom-prone regions. Get your detailed report for seasonal trends, and visit our Kansas page for statewide data.