WaterVerge
Chromium-6 Contamination

Chromium-6 in New Mexico Drinking Water

Ranked by max chromium-6 detected (µg/L) · UCMR 3 data (2013–2015) · Data from EPA SDWIS & UCMR

20
Cities Tested
20
Detected
100%
% Detected
2.96 µg/L
State Avg
▼ 0% vs national
vs National
157
Health Violations

Chromium-6 in New Mexico: what the data shows

New Mexico has 20 cities with chromium-6 data from the EPA's UCMR 3 program (2013–2015). Hexavalent chromium (Cr VI) was detected in 20 of those cities. There is currently no federal MCL for chromium-6 — California's 10 µg/L limit is used as a reference. The state average max detected level is 2.96 µg/L. Chromium-6 occurs naturally in some groundwater aquifers but also from industrial discharge, particularly from steel processing, chrome plating, and leather tanning. It is distinct from trivalent chromium (Cr III), which is an essential nutrient at low doses. The National Toxicology Program and IARC classify chromium-6 as a carcinogen via inhalation; the evidence for drinking water carcinogenicity is strong but regulatory action at the federal level remains pending as of 2026. Reverse osmosis systems effectively remove chromium-6 to near-undetectable levels.

Cities exceeding No federal MCL (CA: 10 µg/L)

New Mexico
100%
20 of 20 cities
= Exactly at national rate
National avg
100%
4005 of 4005 cities

Chromium-6 data across New Mexico

Each dot is a city with UCMR 3 chromium-6 data. Detected cities are shown; there is no federal MCL — California's 10 µg/L limit is used as a reference. Size reflects population served.

All New Mexico cities ranked by chromium-6 level

# City Level Level Detected? Violations Grade
1 Rio Rancho 10.63 µg/L
Detected 4
B+
2 Las Cruces 8.40 µg/L
Detected 222
F
3 Albuquerque 7.30 µg/L
Detected 232
F
4 Hobbs 7.30 µg/L
Detected 24
F
5 Los Alamos 5.40 µg/L
Detected 1
A
6 Deming 4.20 µg/L
Detected 50
F
7 Los Lunas 3.52 µg/L
Detected 77
F
8 Silver City 2.80 µg/L
Detected 40
F
9 Santa Fe 1.90 µg/L
Detected 200
F
10 Alamogordo 1.60 µg/L
Detected 41
F
11 Dona Ana 1.40 µg/L
Detected 21
F
12 Clovis 1.22 µg/L
Detected 66
F
13 Artesia 0.75 µg/L
Detected 75
F
14 Ranchos De Taos 0.74 µg/L
Detected 98
F
15 Carlsbad 0.67 µg/L
Detected 38
F
16 Portales 0.62 µg/L
Detected 11
B-
17 Farmington 0.37 µg/L
Detected 55
F
18 Roswell 0.33 µg/L
Detected 14
D
19 Ruidoso 0.04 µg/L
Detected 63
F
20 Las Vegas 0.04 µg/L
Detected 93
F

Frequently asked questions about chromium-6 in New Mexico

Is chromium-6 in New Mexico tap water dangerous?

Chromium-6 (hexavalent chromium) is a potential human carcinogen. There is currently no federal MCL — California's 10 µg/L limit is the most protective US standard. 20 cities in New Mexico had detectable chromium-6 in UCMR 3 testing (2013–2015). Reverse osmosis is the most effective removal method.

Where does chromium-6 come from in New Mexico water?

Chromium-6 enters water supplies from two main sources: natural weathering of chromium-containing rock formations (especially in the Southwest and parts of the Midwest) and industrial discharge from steel mills, chrome plating, and coal ash sites. Groundwater systems are more commonly affected by natural sources, while surface water systems near industrial areas face pollution-related risks.

How can I filter chromium-6 from my water in New Mexico?

Reverse osmosis (RO) systems are the most effective, removing over 95% of chromium-6. Some high-quality activated alumina or anion exchange filters also provide significant reduction. Standard carbon filters and pitcher filters are generally NOT effective against chromium-6. Look for filters certified by NSF International against NSF/ANSI 58 (for RO systems).