Executive Summary
Missouri operates 0 public water systems monitored through state and federal testing programs, serving communities across 1,041 ZIP codes. Our analysis of 0 individual test results from EPA, state laboratory data, and Consumer Confidence Reports reveals 0 instances where contaminant levels exceeded federal or state Maximum Contaminant Levels (MCLs) — an overall exceedance rate of 0%.
The state's primary water quality challenges center on lead mining legacy contamination in southeast Missouri and agricultural chemical runoff. Geographic risk patterns across Missouri reflect lead mining legacy in the Old Lead Belt (southeast Missouri has some of the highest environmental lead levels in the nation); agricultural atrazine and nitrate in northern Missouri; and PFAS near military installations.
This report is not a summary — it is a ground-level examination of what the data actually shows. Every number comes from EPA SDWIS enforcement records, state laboratory testing programs, Consumer Confidence Reports filed by utilities, FEMA flood insurance claims, and Census Bureau housing stock data. Where the data tells a clear story, we state it plainly. Where it is ambiguous or incomplete, we note that too.
Key Findings
- 0 MCL exceedances identified across 0 water systems
- 424 ZIP codes with active enforcement issues (40.7% of state)
- 612 ZIP codes rated high lead exposure risk based on infrastructure age and test results
- 247 unresolved violations across the state — 497 formal enforcement actions taken
- 561 ZIP codes with FEMA flood claims history — $576.1M in total flood damage payouts
Contaminant Analysis
State laboratory testing and EPA monitoring data reveal the scope of contamination across Missouri's water supply. The following analysis covers both regulated contaminants with federal MCLs and state-specific standards — Missouri follows federal MCLs; DNR enforcement has focused on disinfection byproduct compliance but lead mining legacy contamination requires specialized monitoring.
Top Contaminants by MCL Exceedance Rate
State vs. Federal Standards
Missouri follows federal MCLs; DNR enforcement has focused on disinfection byproduct compliance but lead mining legacy contamination requires specialized monitoring.
This regulatory landscape creates a two-tier compliance reality. A water system in Missouri may appear "in compliance" on federal reports while actually exceeding stricter state limits. For residents reading their annual Consumer Confidence Report, this distinction matters enormously — the report may reference federal standards while the state is enforcing tighter ones.
The gap between state and federal standards also affects how violations are counted. Our dataset captures both tiers, which is why the exceedance counts above may differ from EPA-only reporting. When we say a system "exceeds the MCL," we mean the applicable limit — federal or state, whichever is stricter.
Worst Water Systems by Violations
The following systems had the highest number of MCL exceedances in our dataset. A critical caveat: exceedance count alone does not mean a system is currently unsafe. Many exceedances are resolved through treatment adjustments, blending, or switching water sources. However, patterns of repeated violations across multiple contaminants or multiple years indicate systemic issues — underfunding, aging treatment infrastructure, or management failures — that are unlikely to resolve without intervention.
Enforcement & Compliance
EPA and state enforcement actions tell the story of how violations translate (or fail to translate) into accountability. The enforcement pipeline works in stages: a violation is detected, an informal action (like a warning letter) may be issued, and if non-compliance persists, formal enforcement — consent orders, administrative orders, or court actions — follows. The ratio between informal and formal actions reveals how aggressively a state pursues compliance.
Enforcement Snapshot
- 7,509 total enforcement actions across Missouri
- 497 formal enforcement actions (consent orders, administrative orders, court actions)
- 773 health-based violations documented
- 247 violations remain unresolved
- 424 of 1,041 ZIP codes have active compliance issues
Only 7% of enforcement actions in Missouri are formal (court orders, consent decrees, administrative penalties). The remaining 93% are informal — warning letters, compliance schedules, and technical assistance. This ratio matters: informal actions carry no legal penalty and rely on voluntary compliance. When systems repeatedly violate MCLs without facing formal enforcement, the deterrent effect weakens.
247 violations remain officially unresolved across the state. Each unresolved violation represents a system where contamination was detected, documented, and — as of our latest data — not yet remediated to the satisfaction of regulators. the Doe Run lead smelter cleanup in Herculaneum set precedents for mining legacy remediation; PFAS investigations at military and industrial sites are expanding.
Areas with Most Health Violations
| City/Area | Enforcement Actions | Total Violations | Health-Based |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown | 1,232 | 79 | 79 |
| Chesterfield | 30 | 30 | 30 |
| Saint Louis | 92 | 23 | 23 |
| Springfield | 160 | 17 | 17 |
| Defiance | 10 | 15 | 15 |
| Silex | 10 | 15 | 15 |
| Monroe City | 10 | 13 | 13 |
| Rich Hill | 10 | 12 | 12 |
Geographic Risk Patterns
Water quality risk in Missouri is not evenly distributed. Lead mining legacy in the Old Lead Belt (southeast Missouri has some of the highest environmental lead levels in the nation); agricultural atrazine and nitrate in northern Missouri; and PFAS near military installations create distinct regional patterns that are visible in the data.
Understanding where water quality problems concentrate is as important as understanding what contaminants are present. A statewide average conceals enormous ZIP-to-ZIP variation — two communities 20 miles apart may have completely different risk profiles based on their water source, treatment infrastructure, and local geology.
Data Anomalies & Notable Findings
Our automated anomaly detection system flagged 8+ patterns worth investigation in Missouri:
| Pattern Type | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| Enforcement activity spike | 287 |
| rapid-decline | 118 |
| Score contradictions (safety score vs. actual data) | 84 |
| Island of safety (clean ZIP surrounded by violations) | 50 |
| Wealth paradox (high income, poor water) | 37 |
High-severity findings:
- ZIP 63447 (severity 9/10): Children in La Belle, MO (63447) attend school in a lead-risk zone with 1966-era plumbing — View full report
- ZIP 64427 (severity 9/10): Children in Bolckow, MO (64427) attend school in a lead-risk zone with 1952-era plumbing — View full report
- ZIP 61335 (severity 7/10): Mc Nabb, IL (61335) is a D-grade outlier amid 3 A/B neighbors — View full report
Lead Exposure & Infrastructure Age
Lead contamination in drinking water is almost never caused by the water source itself — it leaches from lead service lines, lead solder in copper pipes, and brass fixtures as water sits in contact with these materials. This means lead risk is fundamentally an infrastructure problem, and infrastructure age is the single strongest predictor.
In Missouri, St. Louis and Kansas City have aging urban infrastructure while rural Missouri has thousands of small systems with limited maintenance budgets; lead mining areas face unique groundwater contamination. The federal Lead and Copper Rule (LCR) requires utilities to test a sample of high-risk homes and report the 90th percentile lead level — meaning 90% of samples must be below the 15 ppb action level. But this sampling methodology has long been criticized: utilities often avoid the worst homes, and the action level itself is not a health-based standard (the EPA has stated there is no safe level of lead exposure).
Lead Risk Profile
- 612 ZIP codes classified as high lead exposure risk
- 612 ZIP codes with elevated or high risk combined
- Average lead exposure score: 51/100 (higher = more risk)
- Average pre-1986 housing stock: 63.8%
- Average median home build year: 1972
Across Missouri, 731 ZIP codes have elevated or high lead pipe risk based on housing age, and 306 have elevated electrical system risk. These infrastructure age indicators are derived from Census Bureau American Community Survey data on housing stock vintage.
The connection between housing age and water contamination risk is well-documented: homes built before 1986 (when the federal ban on lead solder took effect) are significantly more likely to have lead in their plumbing. Homes built before 1950 face even higher risk, as lead service lines were standard construction practice in many parts of the country during that era.
Highest Lead Exposure Risk ZIP Codes
| ZIP | City | Lead Score | Pre-1986 Housing | Lead 90th Percentile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 64683 | Trenton | 85/100 | 79% | 18.7 ppb |
| 65237 | Bunceton | 83/100 | 71% | 27.7 ppb |
| 64679 | Spickard | 81/100 | 71% | 42.6 ppb |
| 64475 | Parnell | 79/100 | 78% | 11.6 ppb |
| 63653 | Leadwood | 78/100 | 91% | 6.3 ppb |
| 63663 | Pilot Knob | 78/100 | 86% | 13.7 ppb |
| 65322 | Blackwater | 78/100 | 77% | 10.5 ppb |
| 61057 | — | 77/100 | 100% | — |
Flood Risk & Water Infrastructure
Flooding directly threatens water quality through multiple mechanisms: overwhelmed treatment plants release partially treated water, floodwaters can infiltrate well heads and contaminate groundwater sources, damaged distribution lines create entry points for bacteria and sediment, and power outages disable treatment systems entirely. In the aftermath of major flood events, boil-water advisories become common — but many residents in affected areas may not receive timely notification.
- 561 ZIP codes in Missouri have FEMA flood insurance claims on record
- 29,739 total flood insurance claims filed historically
- $576.1 million in total flood damage payouts
The average flood insurance claim payout in Missouri is $19,371. While flood damage is typically associated with structural property damage, the water quality implications are often overlooked. Communities with repeated flooding face compounding infrastructure degradation — each event weakens pipes, treatment facilities, and distribution systems that may not be fully restored before the next event.
Consumer Confidence Reports (CCRs)
Water utilities are required to publish annual Consumer Confidence Reports. We have parsed CCR data for 1,039 ZIP codes in Missouri, documenting 598 self-reported violations and 681 systems with detectable lead levels.
CCR data is self-reported by utilities and may undercount actual contamination events. Cross-referencing CCR data with EPA SDWIS violation records provides a more complete picture — which is exactly what ZipCheckup reports do for every ZIP code.
Trend Analysis & Regulatory Outlook
the Doe Run lead smelter cleanup in Herculaneum set precedents for mining legacy remediation; PFAS investigations at military and industrial sites are expanding.
Three major regulatory forces are reshaping water quality across Missouri and the country:
Lead and Copper Rule Improvements (LCRI): The 2024 LCRI represents the most significant update to lead regulation since the original 1991 rule. It requires all water systems to complete a lead service line inventory, lower the action level trigger from 15 ppb to 10 ppb, and replace all lead service lines within 10 years. For Missouri's 0 systems, this means billions in infrastructure investment — and a fundamental reshaping of the lead risk landscape we document above.
PFAS National Primary Drinking Water Regulation (2024): For the first time, EPA set enforceable MCLs for six PFAS compounds — PFOA and PFOS at 4 ppt, and four others at various levels. Systems nationwide are still in the initial monitoring phase, which is why our PFAS data captures detections that may not yet have triggered formal violations. Treatment to remove PFAS (primarily granular activated carbon or reverse osmosis) is expensive, and many small systems will struggle to comply within the 3–5 year implementation timeline.
State-level action: Missouri follows federal MCLs; DNR enforcement has focused on disinfection byproduct compliance but lead mining legacy contamination requires specialized monitoring. As federal regulation catches up to state standards in some areas, the patchwork of requirements creates an uneven compliance landscape that makes cross-state comparisons complex but ZIP-level analysis essential.
What Missouri Residents Should Do
Based on our analysis of 0 test results and 1,041 ZIP codes, here are specific actions for Missouri residents:
- Check your ZIP code report — enter your ZIP at ZipCheckup.com to see contaminant data, violation history, and risk scores specific to your address
- Request your utility's CCR — if your ZIP is not in our CCR database, request the latest Consumer Confidence Report directly from your water utility
- Test your water independently — home water testing kits ($30–$150) can detect lead, bacteria, and common contaminants. Lab testing ($100–$400) provides more comprehensive results
- Consider filtration — for the contaminants most prevalent in Missouri (Lead, Nitrate, Atrazine), reverse osmosis or NSF-certified carbon filters provide the most effective protection
- Check for lead service lines — if your home was built before 1986, contact your utility to determine if you have a lead service line. Many utilities now offer free inspections
- Prepare for flood events — if you're in a flood-prone area, keep bottled water reserves and know how to shut off your water main. After any flood, do not use tap water until your utility confirms safety
Methodology & Data Sources
This analysis combines multiple data sources:
- EPA SDWIS — Safe Drinking Water Information System violation and enforcement records
- State laboratory data — State-specific monitoring data (— records)
- EPA ECHO — Enforcement and Compliance History Online, including PFAS detections and enforcement actions
- Consumer Confidence Reports — parsed and cross-referenced with EPA data for 1,039 ZIP codes
- FEMA NFIP — National Flood Insurance Program claims data
- Census ACS — Housing age and demographic data for infrastructure risk modeling
- Lead exposure modeling — ZipCheckup's proprietary lead risk score combining housing age, water test results, and service line data
All data is updated regularly. This report reflects data available as of 2026-06-04.
Related Reports
- Missouri State Overview — ZIP rankings, county breakdown, and safety scores
- Lead in Missouri — detailed contaminant breakdown
- Nitrate in Missouri — detailed contaminant breakdown
- Water Safety Rankings by State — compare Missouri to other states
Highest-Risk ZIP Codes in Missouri
- 64683 Trenton Water Report — Lead: 18.7 ppb
- 65237 Bunceton Water Report — Lead: 27.7 ppb
- 64679 Spickard Water Report — Lead: 42.6 ppb
- 64475 Parnell Water Report — Lead: 11.6 ppb
- 63653 Leadwood Water Report — Lead: 6.3 ppb