WaterVerge
Chlorate Contamination

Chlorate in Nebraska Drinking Water

Ranked by max chlorate detected (µg/L) · UCMR 3 data (2013–2015) · Data from EPA SDWIS & UCMR

11
Cities Tested
4
Over HA
36%
% Over HA
165.9 µg/L
State Avg
▼ 23% vs national
vs National
195
Health Violations

Chlorate in Nebraska: what the data shows

Nebraska has 11 cities with chlorate data from the EPA's UCMR 3 program (2013–2015). Chlorate exceeded the 210 µg/L EPA lifetime health advisory in 4 of those cities. The state average max detected level is 165.9 µg/L. Chlorate is a disinfection byproduct that forms when chlorine dioxide or hypochlorite solutions are used to disinfect drinking water. It is most common in systems that use chlorine dioxide for taste-and-odor control or that store hypochlorite for extended periods. There is no federal MCL — the EPA lifetime health advisory is 210 µg/L. Chlorate can interfere with thyroid function by blocking iodide uptake, an effect of particular concern for pregnant women, infants, and people with thyroid conditions. Reverse osmosis and ion exchange (anion-specific) are effective at removing chlorate; standard activated carbon filters provide only modest reduction.

Cities exceeding 210 µg/L EPA lifetime HA (no MCL)

Nebraska
36%
4 of 11 cities
▼ 23% below national rate (better)
National avg
59%
1866 of 3166 cities

Chlorate data across Nebraska

Each dot is a city with UCMR 3 chlorate testing data. Cities where chlorate exceeds the 210 µg/L EPA lifetime health advisory are highlighted. Size reflects population served.

All Nebraska cities ranked by chlorate level

# City Level Level Over HA? Violations Grade
1 Kearney 390.0 µg/L
Over HA 45
C+
2 Columbus 273.8 µg/L
Over HA 75
F
3 Scottsbluff 272.1 µg/L
Over HA 20
A-
4 Creighton 227.0 µg/L
Over HA 7
A-
5 Papillion 180.0 µg/L
No 17
C+
6 Hastings 147.5 µg/L
No 14
B-
7 Beatrice 84.6 µg/L
No 15
A-
8 Fremont 81.7 µg/L
No 51
C+
9 Grand Island 67.0 µg/L
No 4
B
10 Lincoln 55.0 µg/L
No 64
C-
11 Omaha 46.0 µg/L
No 14
C-

Frequently asked questions about chlorate in Nebraska

Is chlorate in Nebraska tap water dangerous?

Chlorate has no federal MCL. The EPA lifetime health advisory is 210 µg/L. 4 cities in Nebraska exceed this level. Chlorate can interfere with thyroid iodide uptake, which is a particular concern for infants, pregnant women, and people with hypothyroidism.

Where does chlorate in Nebraska water come from?

Chlorate is a byproduct of chlorine-based disinfectants — particularly chlorine dioxide and hypochlorite (bleach) solutions. Levels tend to be higher in systems that use chlorine dioxide for taste-and-odor treatment or store sodium hypochlorite at high concentrations or for long periods. Levels vary seasonally with disinfectant use.

How can I reduce chlorate exposure?

Reverse osmosis is the most effective home treatment for chlorate, typically removing 80–95%. Anion exchange systems also work but require regeneration. Standard activated carbon filters provide only limited chlorate reduction. Boiling does NOT remove chlorate.