WaterVerge
Nitrate Contamination

Nitrate in Rhode Island Drinking Water

Ranked by nitrate violation count · Data from EPA SDWIS & UCMR

13
Cities Tested
13
Has Violations
100%
% Has Violations
1.4 violations
State Avg
▼ 0% vs national
vs National
34
Health Violations

Nitrate in Rhode Island: what the data shows

Rhode Island has 13 cities with nitrate-related violations. The EPA MCL for nitrate is 10 mg/L (measured as nitrogen). The state has 13 cities with at least one nitrate violation. Nitrate is the most common groundwater contaminant in the United States. It enters water supplies primarily through agricultural fertilizer runoff, septic system leaching, and animal feedlot operations. Rural and agricultural communities face the highest risk. The primary acute health concern is methemoglobinemia ("blue baby syndrome") in infants under six months. Emerging research also links chronic nitrate exposure to thyroid disease, certain cancers, and adverse birth outcomes. Reverse osmosis, ion exchange, and distillation can remove nitrate from drinking water — standard carbon filters do not.

Cities exceeding 10 mg/L EPA MCL

Rhode Island
100%
13 of 13 cities
= Exactly at national rate
National avg
100%
8001 of 8001 cities

Nitrate data across Rhode Island

Each dot is a city with nitrate violation data. Cities with at least one nitrate-related violation are highlighted. Size reflects population served.

Rhode Island city water quality map

All Rhode Island cities ranked by nitrate level

# City Level Level Violations? Violations Grade
1 Middletown 3 violations
Yes 17
B
2 Coventry 2 violations
Yes 6
C+
3 South Kingstown 2 violations
Yes 38
F
4 Charlestown 2 violations
Yes 28
F
5 Cranston 1 violations
Yes 4
B-
6 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 1
C+
7 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 12
B+
8 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 7
F
9 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 5
B
10 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 1
B+
11 Coventry 1 violations
Yes 1
B+
12 Barrington 1 violations
Yes 9
B-
13 Westerly 1 violations
Yes 5
C

Frequently asked questions about nitrate in Rhode Island

Is nitrate in Rhode Island tap water dangerous?

Yes — 13 cities in Rhode Island have nitrate-related violations. The EPA MCL is 10 mg/L. Nitrate is especially dangerous for infants under six months, where it can cause methemoglobinemia ("blue baby syndrome"). Adults face lower acute risk, but chronic exposure is linked to thyroid disease and certain cancers.

How can I remove nitrate from my drinking water?

Reverse osmosis, ion exchange, and distillation are effective at removing nitrate. Standard carbon filters (including most pitcher and faucet-mount filters) do NOT remove nitrate. If you rely on a private well in an agricultural area, have your water tested annually for nitrate.

What causes high nitrate levels in Rhode Island water?

Nitrate contamination comes primarily from agricultural fertilizer runoff, septic system leaching, and animal feedlot operations. Rural communities near intensive farming are most at risk. Shallow wells are particularly vulnerable. Heavy rainfall can spike nitrate levels as it washes fertilizer into groundwater and surface water supplies.