Perchlorate in QC Drinking Water
Ranked by max perchlorate detected (µg/L) · UCMR 1 data (2001–2005) · Data from EPA SDWIS & UCMR
Perchlorate in QC: what the data shows
QC has 0 cities with perchlorate data from the EPA's UCMR 1 program (2001–2005). Perchlorate exceeded California's 6 µg/L MCL in 0 of those cities. The state average max detected level is N/A µg/L. Note: this is the most recent national perchlorate monitoring dataset; UCMR rounds 2–5 did not include perchlorate. Perchlorate (ClO4⁻) is an oxidizing salt used historically in solid rocket propellants, fireworks, road flares, and certain explosives. It enters drinking water primarily from defense and aerospace contamination sites, fireworks manufacturing, and some natural deposits in arid regions. It is highly soluble and very mobile in groundwater. Perchlorate interferes with thyroid iodide uptake and hormone production, with potential effects on fetal and infant brain development. There is no federal MCL — the EPA proposed regulating perchlorate at 56 µg/L in 2008, withdrew the rule in 2020, and has not finalized a federal limit. California's MCL is 6 µg/L, Massachusetts is 2 µg/L. Reverse osmosis and ion exchange are effective treatments.
Cities exceeding CA MCL: 6 µg/L · MA MCL: 2 µg/L (no federal MCL)
Perchlorate data across QC
Each dot is a city with UCMR 1 perchlorate testing data. Cities above the 15 µg/L reference level are highlighted. Size reflects population served.
All QC cities ranked by perchlorate level
No perchlorate data available for QC cities.
Frequently asked questions about perchlorate in QC
Is perchlorate in QC tap water harmful?
Perchlorate interferes with thyroid hormone production by blocking iodide uptake, which is a particular concern for fetuses, infants, and people with hypothyroidism. No cities in QC exceeded California's 6 µg/L MCL in UCMR 1 testing. There is no federal MCL.
Why doesn't the EPA regulate perchlorate federally?
The EPA proposed a federal perchlorate MCL of 56 µg/L in 2008 and reversed course in 2020, citing insufficient evidence of widespread risk above that threshold. Critics — including pediatric and thyroid health groups — argue that the 6 µg/L California MCL or 2 µg/L Massachusetts level is more health-protective. Federal regulation remains pending. UCMR 1 (2001–2005) is the most recent systematic national perchlorate dataset.
How can I remove perchlorate from my drinking water?
Reverse osmosis is highly effective (90%+ removal). Anion exchange systems also work well. Standard activated carbon filters are NOT effective against perchlorate. If you live near a former military, aerospace, or fireworks-manufacturing site, periodic perchlorate testing of well water is warranted.