Radium in Glassboro, NJ Drinking Water
Radium data for Glassboro, New Jersey · 24,806 residents · 1 ZIP code
ZipCheckup's reading of Radium in Glassboro, New Jersey: the highest detected level is 10.7 pCi/L; the EPA limit is 5 pCi/L (combined Ra-226 + Ra-228). Radium carries a high health-risk designation.
Across Glassboro, New Jersey, federal monitoring data has captured Radium in water samples at detectable concentrations in the most recent available reporting cycle.
Data: EPA SDWIS, CCR Reports, ECHO Last verified: 2026-07-13
Radium in Glassboro Tap Water
Radium has been detected in Glassboro, New Jersey drinking water at a maximum level of 10.7 pCi/L — relative to the EPA MCL of 5 pCi/L (combined Ra-226 + Ra-228).
This analysis covers 24,806 residents across 1 ZIP code in Glassboro.
Glassboro's overall water quality grade is C (64/100).
Is Radium in Glassboro Water Safe?
Radium was detected in Glassboro water but currently falls within EPA limits. However, some health organizations argue the EPA MCL may not be protective enough.
If you are concerned, a reverse osmosis or ion exchange filter can reduce radium levels further.
Radium Levels by ZIP Code
| ZIP Code | Radium Level | EPA Limit | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 08028 | 10.7 pCi/L | 5 pCi/L (combined Ra-226 + Ra-228) | Not comparable |
Average radium level across Glassboro: 10.7 pCi/L
Health Effects of Radium
- Increased risk of bone cancer (radium accumulates in bones)
- The body treats radium like calcium, storing it in bones
- Lifetime cancer risk of ~1 in 10,000 at 5 pCi/L
- No safe threshold for radioactive contamination
Health risk severity: High. Governed by the Radionuclides Rule.
How Radium Gets Into Drinking Water
- Natural radioactive decay in underground rock formations
- Groundwater sources (especially deep wells)
- Mining and industrial waste
- Higher in regions with specific geology (Midwest, parts of South)
What to Do About Radium in Glassboro Water
- Reverse osmosis (NSF 58 certified) removes 90%+ of radium
- Ion exchange (water softeners) can reduce radium
- Point-of-use RO at kitchen tap is most cost-effective
- GAC filters alone are NOT effective for radium
Look for filters certified under NSF 58 for radium removal.