Exceeds EPA Limit Copper EXCEEDS EPA LIMIT

Copper in Wenonah, NJ Drinking Water

Copper data for Wenonah, New Jersey · 9,574 residents · 1 ZIP code

Federal water monitoring extends to thousands of public water systems, and in Wenonah, New Jersey, that tracking has turned up Copper — the detection is logged in the EPA compliance record and reflects samples collected under routine Safe Drinking Water Act reporting requirements.

2071 ppb
Max Level Detected
2071 ppb
Average Level
1.3 mg/L (action level)
EPA action level
Moderate
Health Risk
Reverse Osmosis or NSF 53 Carbon Block
Best Filter Method

Data: EPA SDWIS, CCR Reports, ECHO Last verified: 2026-04-05

Copper in Wenonah Tap Water

Copper has been detected in Wenonah, New Jersey drinking water at a maximum level of 2071 ppb1.59x the EPA action level.

This analysis covers 9,574 residents across 1 ZIP code in Wenonah.

Wenonah's overall water quality grade is B (73/100).

Is Copper in Wenonah Water Safe?

Copper levels in parts of Wenonah exceed the EPA action level of 1.3 mg/L (action level). The EPA requires water systems to take corrective action when this limit is exceeded.

If you live in an affected ZIP code, consider installing a reverse osmosis or nsf 53 carbon block filter certified under NSF 53 and testing your water independently.

Copper Levels by ZIP Code

ZIP Code Copper Level EPA Limit Status
08090 2071 ppb 1.3 mg/L (action level) Exceeds limit

Average copper level across Wenonah: 2071 ppb

Health Effects of Copper

  • Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea (short-term, high levels)
  • Liver and kidney damage (long-term)
  • Particularly dangerous for people with Wilson's disease
  • Infants are more sensitive than adults

Health risk severity: Moderate. Governed by the Lead and Copper Rule.

How Copper Gets Into Drinking Water

  • Corrosion of copper household plumbing
  • Acidic (low pH) water accelerates copper leaching
  • New copper pipes leach more than aged ones
  • Mining and industrial discharge (rare for tap water)

What to Do About Copper in Wenonah Water

  1. Run water for 30-60 seconds before use (flushes stagnant water)
  2. Install an NSF 53 or NSF 58 certified filter
  3. If pH is low, consider a whole-home acid neutralizer
  4. Test first-draw morning water to check actual copper levels

Look for filters certified under NSF 53 for copper removal.

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