WaterVerge
Lithium Contamination

Lithium in South Carolina Drinking Water

Ranked by max lithium detected (µg/L) · UCMR 5 data (2023–2025) · Data from EPA SDWIS & UCMR

19
Cities Tested
19
Detected
100%
% Detected
20.6 µg/L
State Avg
▼ 0% vs national
vs National
151
Health Violations

Lithium in South Carolina: what the data shows

South Carolina has 19 cities with lithium data from the EPA's UCMR 5 program (2023–2025). Lithium was detected in 19 of those cities. There is currently no federal MCL or health advisory for lithium — the state average max detected level is 20.6 µg/L. Nationally, lithium is detected in roughly 28% of sampled water systems. Lithium occurs naturally in groundwater, particularly in arid western states, and is concentrated in some surface waters near industrial discharge or geothermal sources. UCMR 5 added lithium monitoring in 2023, providing the first systematic national snapshot of public-water lithium levels. At therapeutic doses (administered as a medication), lithium is used to treat bipolar disorder. Chronic low-dose exposure from drinking water has been associated in some studies with effects on thyroid function and possibly mood. The most protective state guidance value is around 60 µg/L. Reverse osmosis and ion exchange are effective removal methods.

Cities exceeding No federal MCL or HA

South Carolina
100%
19 of 19 cities
= Exactly at national rate
National avg
100%
2808 of 2808 cities

Lithium data across South Carolina

Each dot is a city with UCMR 5 lithium testing data. Detected cities are shown — there is no federal limit, though some states use 60 µg/L as a screening level. Size reflects population served.

All South Carolina cities ranked by lithium level

# City Level Level Detected? Violations Grade
1 Gilbert 49.4 µg/L
Detected 53
B
2 Bamberg 39.0 µg/L
Detected 1
A
3 Sumter 33.6 µg/L
Detected 15
D
4 Conway 30.1 µg/L
Detected 14
C+
5 Isle Of Palms 26.0 µg/L
Detected 3
B+
6 Darlington 25.6 µg/L
Detected 6
B+
7 Florence 22.6 µg/L
Detected 3
B+
8 Hilton Head Island 21.3 µg/L
Detected 4
B-
9 Johnsonville 18.0 µg/L
Detected 2
A
10 Pawleys Island 17.2 µg/L
Detected 13
B-
11 Myrtle Beach 14.2 µg/L
Detected 17
B-
12 Marion 13.7 µg/L
Detected 4
A
13 Summerville 12.7 µg/L
Detected 22
C+
14 Hemingway 12.7 µg/L
Detected 11
B+
15 Dalzell 11.9 µg/L
Detected 7
B-
16 Andrews 11.9 µg/L
Detected 1
B
17 Georgetown 11.8 µg/L
Detected 16
B
18 Edisto Beach 11.0 µg/L
Detected 13
C
19 Kingstree 9.6 µg/L
Detected 4
B

Frequently asked questions about lithium in South Carolina

Is lithium in South Carolina tap water harmful?

Lithium has no federal MCL or health advisory. Some state agencies use 60 µg/L as a screening level. 19 cities in South Carolina had detectable lithium in UCMR 5 testing. Therapeutic lithium doses (used to treat bipolar disorder) are far higher than typical drinking-water levels, but chronic low-level exposure has been studied for potential thyroid and mood effects.

Where does lithium in tap water come from?

Lithium occurs naturally in groundwater, especially in arid western states with lithium-bearing geology (parts of Nevada, California, North Carolina, Texas). It can also enter water from industrial sources such as battery manufacturing, ceramics, and lithium-mining wastewater. Geothermal hot springs are another natural source.

How can I remove lithium from my drinking water?

Reverse osmosis is highly effective at removing lithium, typically reducing it by 90% or more. Ion exchange systems and distillation also work well. Standard activated carbon filters are NOT effective against lithium. If you rely on a private well in a lithium-rich geological area, consider testing.