WaterVerge

Is Hoxie, KS Tap Water Safe to Drink?

Graded A, with 4 unresolved violations on record. See what was cited — and what it means for your tap. What to do next ↓

1K residents served 1 water system PWSID: KS2017901
Overall Score
92.2 / 100
Violations
4 active
Last Updated
May 2026
Source
Groundwater
#8 of 323 in Kansas Top 9% nationally
Local Government
Moderate data confidence
Reviewed by WaterVerge Editorial Team · Last updated May 2026
AGRADE
Water Quality Grade
92.2/100
waterverge.com
A 92.2/100

Hoxie, KS — Water Quality Report

Hoxie's drinking water received a grade of A (92.2 out of 100), indicating excellent water quality. The city's 1 water system serves approximately 1,218 residents using groundwater.

Lead levels were measured at 0.7 ppb (90th percentile), well within EPA limits. This system has not yet been tested for PFAS under the EPA UCMR 5 program.

The system has 40 violations on record, including 1 health-based violation. 4 remain unresolved.

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

What to know about Hoxie's water

Hoxie ranks #8 out of 323 cities in Kansas for water quality, placing it one of the best in the state.

Hoxie relies on groundwater, which is generally less vulnerable to surface contamination but can be affected by naturally occurring minerals like arsenic and nitrate, as well as agricultural and industrial runoff.

As a small community water system, Hoxie may have fewer resources for advanced treatment technologies and infrastructure upgrades compared to larger utilities.

Quality Breakdown

Water quality score

See methodology →
92.2 out of 100 Grade A
A: 90-100
B: 74-89
C: 60-73
F: <50
How is this calculated?
Violations
42.2/45
A
Historical violation record including health-based and monitoring violations.
Lead & Copper
20/20
A
Lead at 0.7 ppb (90th percentile).
Contaminants
17/20
B
PFAS + legacy contaminant analysis.
Compliance
8/10
B
Monitoring and reporting compliance with EPA regulations.
Source Risk
5/5
A
Water source: Groundwater.
Water Safety

Is Hoxie, KS water safe to drink?

Concerns Identified

Hoxie's drinking water has significant quality concerns based on EPA testing data. With a grade of A (92.2/100), the system has issues across multiple categories. A water filter is recommended for all residents. The city's 1 water system serves approximately 1,218 residents using groundwater (wells).

4
Active Violations
0.7 ppb
Lead (90th %ile)
2 events
Disaster History

Recent water quality updates for Hoxie

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

Update
Water quality data updated

Latest EPA compliance and testing data incorporated into Hoxie's water quality assessment. Grade: A (92.2/100).

Violation
1 drinking water violation recorded

Contaminants: Lead and Copper Rule.

Violation
1 drinking water violation recorded

Contaminants: ETHYLENE DIBROMIDE.

Disaster
HURRICANE KATRINA EVACUATION

Federal disaster declaration (FEMA DR-3236). Hurricane event — may have impacted local water infrastructure.

Violation
1 drinking water violation recorded

Contaminants: Nitrate.

Disaster
SEVERE STORMS & FLOODING

Federal disaster declaration (FEMA DR-1000). Flood event — may have impacted local water infrastructure.

Key contaminant findings

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

Lead Within Limits
Detected: 0.7 ppb Limit: 15 ppb (EPA Action Level)

Well within EPA limits.

Violation history

Hoxie's water system has 40 total violations on record, including 1 health-based violation. 4 remain unresolved.

MRTT
Most recent violations:
Dec 2018 Lead and Copper Rule Open
Jan 2012 ETHYLENE DIBROMIDE Resolved
Jan 2004 Nitrate Resolved
Jan 2003 Nickel Resolved
Jan 2003 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene Resolved

Flood & environmental risk

Sheridan County has experienced 2 federally declared disasters since 1993. Flooding and severe storms can overwhelm water treatment plants, cause sewage overflows, and introduce agricultural runoff, bacteria, and sediment into drinking water supplies.

HURRICANE KATRINA EVACUATION
Hurricane FEMA DR-3236
SEVERE STORMS & FLOODING
Flood FEMA DR-1000

Where does Hoxie's water come from?

Hoxie's drinking water comes from groundwater (wells), supplied by 1 water system serving approximately 1,218 people. Groundwater is generally less susceptible to surface contamination but can contain naturally occurring contaminants like arsenic, radon, and nitrate.

What Hoxie residents can do

Install a water filter

Recommended: NSF-certified water filter. This addresses the specific contaminants found in Hoxie'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
0.7 ppb
EPA Action Level: 15 ppb · 5% of limit
Safe Level
Compliance Record

Violation summary

40
Total violations
1
Health-based
4
Active / unresolved
Dec 2018
Most recent violation
Compliance Record

Violations & advisories

40 Total
4 Active
1 Health-based
36 Resolved
Violations by category
Volatile Organic Chemicals
21
Inorganic Chemicals
10
Lead and Copper Rule
3
Synthetic Organic Chemicals
3
Nitrate Rule
1
Dec 2018 Active
Lead and Copper Rule
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting 0
Jan 2001 Active
Lead and Copper Rule
Treatment Technique
Health-Based Health 0
Jul 1993 Active
Lead and Copper Rule
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting 0
Active
Compliance Violation
Monitoring 0
Jan 2012 Resolved
ETHYLENE DIBROMIDE
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2012
Jan 2004 Resolved
Nitrate
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2004
Jan 2003 Resolved
Nickel
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
cis-1,2-Dichloroethylene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
ETHYLENE DIBROMIDE
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
p-Dichlorobenzene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
Vinyl chloride
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
1,1-Dichloroethylene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
1,2-Dichloroethane
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
1,1,1-Trichloroethane
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
Trichloroethylene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
1,1,2-Trichloroethane
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
Tetrachloroethylene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
Benzene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Jan 2003 Resolved
Styrene
Monitoring & Reporting
Monitoring & Reporting Resolved Dec 2003
Showing 20 of 40 violations
Environmental Risk

Drought conditions

D2 — severe drought

Sheridan County is currently in D2 (severe 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.

3
Weeks at D2+ (current streak)
22.0%
Months in D2+ (last 30y)
3
Weeks at D2+ (last 5y)

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

Environmental Risk

Flood & disaster history

2
Declared disasters
Sep 2005
Most recent
Hurricane
Most common type

Sheridan County has experienced 2 federally declared disasters since 1993. Flooding and severe weather can compromise water treatment infrastructure and introduce contaminants into drinking water supplies.

Sep 2005
HURRICANE KATRINA EVACUATION
Hurricane FEMA #3236
Jul 1993
SEVERE STORMS & FLOODING
Flood FEMA #1000

Full contaminants report

Contaminant Detected Level EPA Limit Unit Category Status
Lead (90th percentile) 0.7 15 ppb Inorganic Safe
Data source: EPA SDWIS, UCMR 5, local utility CCR.

Lead level trend (90th percentile)

EPA action level: 15 ppb
Lead has decreased by 27.1 ppb from 2000 (27.8 ppb) to 2024 (0.7 ppb).
Infrastructure

Water source & infrastructure

Primary Source
Groundwater
Operator
Local Government
Population Served
1,218
Water Systems
1
Water Source

Where Hoxie's water comes from

Groundwater

Hoxie's drinking water is drawn from underground aquifers through wells.

Groundwater is naturally filtered through rock and soil layers, generally requiring less treatment than surface water. However, it can contain naturally occurring contaminants like arsenic, radon, and minerals.

Agricultural activity, septic systems, and industrial operations near well fields can introduce nitrates, pesticides, and volatile organic compounds.

The system is operated by local government ownership and serves approximately 1,218 people through 1 water system.

Infrastructure

Water systems serving Hoxie

System Name PWSID Population Source
HOXIE, CITY OF KS2017901 1,218 GW
Regional Comparison

How Hoxie compares

Full Kansas rankings →

Hoxie's score of 92.2/100 is above the average of 62/100 among major Kansas cities. It outscores 10 of 10 nearby cities.

Hoxie (this city)
92.2
Wichita
83.9
Olathe
79.5
Topeka
39.3
Lawrence
74.6
Kansas avg
62
City Profile

About Hoxie, KS

Economic Profile
$68,438
Median Income
$154,138
Median Home Value
$622/mo
Median Rent
0%
Unemployment
Community
39.1
Median Age
578
People / sq mi
29%
College Educated
69.7%
Homeownership
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Frequently asked questions

Is Hoxie, KS tap water safe to drink?

Hoxie's water quality earned a grade of A (92.2/100). The water generally meets EPA standards and is considered safe for consumption. The city ranks #8 out of 323 cities tested in Kansas.

What contaminants are in Hoxie's water?

Lead was measured at 0.7 ppb (90th percentile). 40 violations are on record.

How is Hoxie'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 Hoxie?

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

Where does Hoxie's water come from?

Hoxie's water is sourced from Groundwater. The city has 1 water system serving approximately 1,218 residents.

What health violations has Hoxie's water system had?

Hoxie has 1 health-based violation on record. The most recent violation was recorded in December 2018. Health-based violations mean the water exceeded EPA maximum contaminant levels (MCLs) for a regulated substance. 4 violations remain unresolved.

Is Hoxie's groundwater at risk of contamination?

Hoxie uses groundwater, which can be affected by naturally occurring contaminants like arsenic, radon, and nitrate, as well as agricultural runoff and industrial activity. The system has 40 violations on record that may relate to groundwater quality. Groundwater systems are generally less susceptible to surface contamination but should be monitored for emerging contaminants like PFAS.

How does Hoxie's water compare to other cities?

Hoxie ranks #8 out of 323 cities in Kansas (better than 98% of state cities) and #1348 out of 15744 cities nationally (91th percentile). The grade of A reflects the combined assessment of violation history, lead and copper levels, PFAS contamination, and regulatory compliance.

Does Hoxie's small water system affect quality?

Hoxie's system serves approximately 1,218 residents. Small community water systems (under 3,300 people) may have fewer financial resources for infrastructure upgrades and advanced treatment technologies. However, they are held to the same EPA drinking water standards as larger systems. This system has 40 violations on record.