Exceeds EPA Limit PFAS EXCEEDS EPA LIMIT

PFAS in Harvest, AL Drinking Water

PFAS data for Harvest, Alabama · 29,297 residents · 1 ZIP code

ZipCheckup's reading of PFAS in Harvest, Alabama: the highest detected level is 0.0249 ppt; the EPA limit is 4 ppt (PFOA/PFOS individually). PFAS carries a high health-risk designation.

Because PFAS is associated with health effects at sustained elevated exposures, residents in Harvest, Alabama may find it useful that local water systems have returned detectable concentrations - facts that bear on long-term household water decisions.

0.0249 ppt
Max Level Detected
54 ppt
Average Level
4 ppt (PFOA/PFOS individually)
EPA MCL
High
Health Risk
Reverse Osmosis or Granular Activated Carbon
Best Filter Method

Data: EPA SDWIS, CCR Reports, ECHO Last verified: 2026-07-13

PFAS in Harvest Tap Water

PFAS has been detected in Harvest, Alabama drinking water at a maximum level of 0.0249 detections — relative to the EPA MCL of 4 ppt (PFOA/PFOS individually).

This analysis covers 29,297 residents across 1 ZIP code in Harvest.

Harvest's overall water quality grade is C (61/100).

Is PFAS in Harvest Water Safe?

PFAS levels in parts of Harvest exceed the EPA MCL of 4 ppt (PFOA/PFOS individually). 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 granular activated carbon filter certified under NSF 53 / NSF 58 and testing your water independently.

PFAS Levels by ZIP Code

ZIP Code PFAS Level EPA Limit Status
35749 54 detections 4 ppt (PFOA/PFOS individually) Not comparable

Average pfas level across Harvest: 54 ppt

Health Effects of PFAS

  • Increased risk of kidney and testicular cancer
  • Thyroid disease and immune system suppression
  • Reproductive problems and reduced fertility
  • Elevated cholesterol and liver effects
  • Developmental effects in infants and children

Health risk severity: High. Governed by the PFAS National Primary Drinking Water Regulation (2024).

How PFAS Gets Into Drinking Water

  • Firefighting foam (AFFF) used at military bases and airports
  • Industrial manufacturing (non-stick coatings, stain-resistant fabrics)
  • Wastewater treatment plants that receive industrial discharge
  • Landfill leachate from PFAS-containing consumer products

What to Do About PFAS in Harvest Water

  1. Install a reverse osmosis system (most effective — removes 90%+ of PFAS)
  2. Granular activated carbon (GAC) filters remove some PFAS compounds
  3. Look for NSF 53 or NSF 58 certification specifically tested for PFAS
  4. Pitcher filters with activated carbon provide partial reduction

Look for filters certified under NSF 53 / NSF 58 for pfas removal.

Related

HomeContaminantsPFASAlabama → Harvest

How to cite this page

APA ZipCheckup. (2026). PFAS in Harvest, AL Drinking Water. https://zipcheckup.com/contaminants/pfas/harvest-al/
BibTeX
@misc{zipcheckup-contaminants-pfas-harvest-al,
  author = {{ZipCheckup}},
  title  = {{PFAS in Harvest, AL Drinking Water}},
  year   = {2026},
  url    = {https://zipcheckup.com/contaminants/pfas/harvest-al/}
}

Data as of July 2026.

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