WaterVerge

Is Dequeen, AR Tap Water Safe to Drink?

Graded A- — but Copper and NDMA were detected above EPA limits. Here's what's in the water and how to remove it. What to do next ↓

11K residents served 2 water systems PWSID: AR0000520
Overall Score
88.8 / 100
Violations
3 active
Last Updated
May 2026
Source
Surface water
#115 of 345 in Arkansas Top 21% nationally
Local Government
High data confidence
Reviewed by WaterVerge Editorial Team · Last updated May 2026
A-GRADE
Water Quality Grade
88.8/100
waterverge.com
A- 88.8/100

Dequeen, AR — Water Quality Report

Dequeen's drinking water received a grade of A- (88.8 out of 100), indicating good water quality. The city's 2 water systems serve approximately 11,470 residents using surface water.

Lead levels were measured at 1.0 ppb (90th percentile), well within EPA limits. PFAS testing under UCMR 5 found no detectable forever chemicals.

The system has 24 violations on record, including 17 health-based violations. 3 remain unresolved.

Data last updated: May 2026 · Source: EPA SDWIS, UCMR 5
Analysis

What to know about Dequeen's water

Dequeen ranks #115 out of 345 cities in Arkansas for water quality, placing it mid-range in the state.

The city draws from surface water sources, which are more susceptible to seasonal runoff and agricultural contamination, requiring extensive multi-barrier treatment including coagulation, filtration, and disinfection.

Quality Breakdown

Water quality score

See methodology →
88.8 out of 100 Grade A-
A: 90-100
B: 74-89
C: 60-73
F: <50
How is this calculated?
Violations
41.4/45
A
Historical violation record including health-based and monitoring violations.
Lead & Copper
16/20
B
Lead at 1.0 ppb (90th percentile).
Contaminants
19.4/20
A
No PFAS compounds detected.
Compliance
8/10
B
Monitoring and reporting compliance with EPA regulations.
Source Risk
4/5
B
Water source: Surface water.
Water Safety

Is Dequeen, AR water safe to drink?

Concerns Identified

Dequeen's drinking water has significant quality concerns based on EPA testing data. With a grade of A- (88.8/100), the system has issues across multiple categories. A water filter is recommended for all residents. The city's 2 water systems serve approximately 11,470 residents using surface water (rivers, lakes, or reservoirs).

3
Active Violations
1.0 ppb
Lead (90th %ile)
None
PFAS Detected

Recent water quality updates for Dequeen

A timeline of significant water quality events, violations, and data updates.

Update
Water quality data updated

Latest EPA compliance and testing data incorporated into Dequeen's water quality assessment. Grade: A- (88.8/100).

Violation
2 drinking water violations recorded

Contaminants: Chlorine dioxide, Chlorite.

Violation
1 drinking water violation recorded

1 health-based. Contaminants: TTHM.

Violation
1 drinking water violation recorded

1 health-based. Contaminants: TTHM.

Key contaminant findings

Based on the most recent EPA sampling data for Dequeen's water supply.

Lead Within Limits
Detected: 1.0 ppb Limit: 15 ppb (EPA Action Level)

Well within EPA limits.

Copper Exceeds Limit
Detected: 1.46 mg/L Limit: 1.3 mg/L (EPA Action Level)

Exceeds EPA action level. Copper can leach from household plumbing — flush taps for 30 seconds before drinking.

Violation history

Dequeen's water system has 24 total violations on record, including 17 health-based violations. 3 remain unresolved.

MRMCLTTOther
Most recent violations:
Sep 2020 Chlorine dioxide Resolved
Sep 2020 Chlorite Resolved
Jul 2012 TTHM Resolved
Apr 2012 TTHM Resolved
Jan 2012 TTHM Resolved

Where does Dequeen's water come from?

Dequeen's drinking water comes from surface water (rivers, lakes, or reservoirs), supplied by 2 water systems serving approximately 11,470 people. Surface water sources are more susceptible to contamination from runoff, industrial discharge, and algal blooms, requiring extensive treatment.

What Dequeen residents can do

Install a water filter

Recommended: NSF-certified water filter. This addresses the specific contaminants found in Dequeen's water.

Request your utility's CCR

Your water utility is required to publish an annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) with detailed testing results. Ask for the latest copy or check your utility's website.

Data: EPA SDWIS, UCMR 5 (PFAS), FEMA, NOAA. Last updated May 2026.

Contaminant Alerts

Top contaminants to know

View all ↓
Lead (90th percentile)
Inorganic / Heavy Metal
Safe
1.0 ppb
EPA Action Level: 15 ppb · 7% of limit
Safe Level
Copper (90th percentile)
Inorganic
Over Limit
1.46 mg/L
EPA Action Level: 1.3 mg/L · +12% over limit
Exceeds Limit
NDMA (N-Nitrosodimethylamine)
Disinfection Byproduct
Over CA PHG
22.0 ng/L
CA Public Health Goal: 10 ng/L · +20% over limit
Over CA PHGProbable CarcinogenUCMR 2 Data (2008–2010)
PFAS Testing

Forever chemicals overview

National PFAS report →
30
Compounds tested
0
Detected
0
Exceed EPA MCL
Compliance Record

Violation summary

24
Total violations
17
Health-based
3
Active / unresolved
Sep 2020
Most recent violation
Compliance Record

Violations & advisories

24 Total
3 Active
17 Health-based
21 Resolved
Violations by category
Stage 1 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule
14
Surface Water Treatment Rule
6
Lead and Copper Rule
2
Consumer Confidence Rule
1
Jul 1995 Active
Lead and Copper Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health 0
Apr 1993 Active
Lead and Copper Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health 0
Active
Compliance Violation
Monitoring 0
Sep 2020 Resolved
Chlorine dioxide
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Sep 2020
Sep 2020 Resolved
Chlorite
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Sep 2020
Jul 2012 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Sep 2012
Apr 2012 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Jun 2012
Jan 2012 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Mar 2012
Oct 2011 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Dec 2011
Jul 2011 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Sep 2011
Apr 2008 Resolved
Total Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Jun 2008
Jan 2008 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Mar 2008
Oct 2007 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Dec 2007
Jul 2007 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Sep 2007
Apr 2007 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Jun 2007
Jul 2006 Resolved
TTHM
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Sep 2006
Jul 2005 Resolved
Total Haloacetic Acids (HAA5)
Max Contaminant Level
Health-Based Health Resolved Sep 2005
Feb 2001 Resolved
Surface Water Treatment Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health Resolved Feb 2001
Jan 2001 Resolved
Surface Water Treatment Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health Resolved Jan 2001
Dec 2000 Resolved
Surface Water Treatment Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health Resolved Dec 2000
Showing 20 of 24 violations
Environmental Risk

Drought conditions

D3 — extreme drought

Sevier County is currently in D3 (extreme drought) per the U.S. Drought Monitor (week of May 5, 2026). Drought can elevate disinfection-byproduct (TTHM/HAA5) levels and taste/odor issues as utilities draw from lower reservoirs.

14
Weeks at D2+ (current streak)
13.7%
Months in D2+ (last 30y)
14
Weeks at D2+ (last 5y)

Source: U.S. Drought Monitor, updated weekly by NDMC, USDA, and NOAA.

Recommended water filters

Based on contaminants detected in Dequeen's water supply, we recommend the following filter types.

🔧
For Copper
Reverse Osmosis or KDF Filter
Copper exceeds the EPA action level of 1.3 mg/L

Full contaminants report

Contaminant Detected Level EPA Limit Unit Category Status
Lead (90th percentile) 1.0 15 ppb Inorganic Safe
Copper (90th percentile) 1.46 1.3 mg/L Inorganic Over Limit
11Cl-PF3OUdS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
4:2 FTS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
6:2 FTS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
8:2 FTS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
9Cl-PF3ONS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
ADONA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
HFPO-DA ND 0.01 µg/L PFAS Not Detected
lithium ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
NEtFOSAA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
NFDHA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
NMeFOSAA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFBA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFBS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFDA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFDoA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFEESA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFHpA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFHpS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFHxA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFHxS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFMBA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFMPA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFNA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFOA ND 0.004 µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFOS ND 0.004 µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFPeA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFPeS ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFTA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFTrDA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
PFUnA ND HI µg/L PFAS Not Detected
Data source: EPA SDWIS, UCMR 5, local utility CCR.

Lead level trend (90th percentile)

EPA action level: 15 ppb
Lead has decreased by 5.0 ppb from 1992 (8.0 ppb) to 2025 (3.0 ppb).

Copper level (90th percentile)

Latest reading: 1.460 mg/L (2020)

EPA action level: 1.3 mg/L

Infrastructure

Water source & infrastructure

Primary Source
Surface Water
Operator
Local Government
Population Served
11,470
Water Systems
2
Water Source

Where Dequeen's water comes from

Surface Water

Dequeen's drinking water comes primarily from surface water sources such as rivers, lakes, or reservoirs.

Surface water systems require multi-stage treatment including coagulation, sedimentation, filtration, and disinfection to meet EPA Safe Drinking Water Act standards.

These sources can be impacted by seasonal changes, stormwater runoff, upstream agriculture, and industrial discharge.

The system is operated by local government ownership and serves approximately 11,470 people through 2 water systems.

Infrastructure

Water systems serving Dequeen

System Name PWSID Population Source
DEQUEEN WATER WORK AR0000520 6,105 SW
SEVIER CO WATER ASSOCIATION AR0000868 5,365 SW
Regional Comparison

How Dequeen compares

Full Arkansas rankings →

Dequeen's score of 88.8/100 is above the average of 75/100 among major Arkansas cities. It outscores 7 of 10 nearby cities.

Dequeen (this city)
88.8
Springdale
79.1
Fort Smith
45.5
Arkansas avg
75
City Profile

About Dequeen, AR

Wikipedia →

The following is a list of dams and reservoirs in Arkansas.

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Frequently asked questions

Is Dequeen, AR tap water safe to drink?

Dequeen's water quality earned a grade of A- (88.8/100). The water generally meets EPA standards and is considered safe for consumption. The city ranks #115 out of 345 cities tested in Arkansas.

What contaminants are in Dequeen's water?

Lead was measured at 1.0 ppb (90th percentile). No PFAS compounds were detected. 24 violations are on record.

How is Dequeen's water quality grade calculated?

The grade is based on four factors: violation history (40%), lead and copper levels (25%), PFAS contamination (25%), and regulatory compliance (10%). The score is also adjusted based on how complete the available data is. See our methodology page for full details.

Do I need a water filter in Dequeen?

Based on current data, basic filtration should suffice for additional peace of mind.

Where does Dequeen's water come from?

Dequeen's water is sourced from Surface water. The city has 2 water systems serving approximately 11,470 residents.

What health violations has Dequeen's water system had?

Dequeen has 17 health-based violations on record. The most recent violation was recorded in September 2020. Health-based violations mean the water exceeded EPA maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for a regulated substance. 3 violations remain unresolved.

How does Dequeen's water compare to other cities?

Dequeen ranks #115 out of 345 cities in Arkansas (better than 67% of state cities) and #3218 out of 15744 cities nationally (80th percentile). The grade of A- reflects the combined assessment of violation history, lead and copper levels, PFAS contamination, and regulatory compliance.