PFAS REPORT SC HIGH RISK

PFAS in South Carolina (SC): 57 ZIPs Exceed Limits

206 ZIPs tested · 57 exceeding limits (28%) · Updated 2026-05-31

Data: EPA UCMR 3/5, SDWIS, ECHO, DOD Last verified: 2026-05-31

28%
ZIPs Exceeding EPA Limits
206
ZIPs Tested
57
ZIPs Exceeding Limits
28
Superfund Sites
13
Military Bases w/ PFAS
327
Untested ZIPs

South Carolina has significant PFAS contamination with 28% of tested ZIP codes exceeding federal limits. 28 Superfund sites and 13 military bases contribute to contamination. Testing your water for PFAS is recommended.

PFAS Contamination Overview

206 ZIP codes in South Carolina have been tested for PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). Of those, 57 (28%) exceed federal EPA limits set in 2024.

An additional 327 ZIP codes in South Carolina have not been tested for PFAS, representing potential undetected contamination.

Key PFAS Statistics

Metric Value
ZIP codes tested 206
Exceeding EPA limits 57 (28%)
Superfund sites 28
Military bases with PFAS 13 of 16
Testing coverage 39% of state ZIP codes
Untested ZIP codes 327

PFAS Contamination Sources

Military Bases

13 military bases in South Carolina are linked to PFAS contamination, primarily from the use of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF) in firefighting training exercises. These foams contain high concentrations of PFOS and PFOA.

Superfund Sites

South Carolina has 28 Superfund sites that may contribute to PFAS contamination through industrial waste, landfill leachate, and chemical manufacturing.

Other Sources

Beyond military and Superfund sites, PFAS contamination in South Carolina also stems from:

  • Industrial facilities and manufacturing plants
  • Airports (AFFF use in fire training)
  • Wastewater treatment plants
  • Landfills (leachate from consumer products)
  • Agricultural use of biosolids

What You Can Do

If your ZIP code shows PFAS contamination:

  1. Test your water — request a PFAS test from your utility or use a certified lab ($200-$400)
  2. Install filtration — reverse osmosis (RO) or granular activated carbon (GAC) systems remove 90%+ of PFAS
  3. Check NSF certification — look for NSF/ANSI 53 or 58 certification on filters
  4. Monitor utility reports — public water systems must test and report PFAS levels by 2029
  5. Avoid contaminated sources — if on a private well near a known contamination source, test regularly

Data Sources

Updated as new testing data becomes available.

Worried about PFAS in your water?

PFAS contamination varies by location. Enter your ZIP code to check PFAS testing results and contamination sources near you.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there PFAS contamination in South Carolina?

206 ZIP codes in South Carolina have been tested for PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). 57 ZIP codes (28%) exceed federal EPA limits. PFAS contamination comes from military bases, industrial sites, and consumer products.

How many ZIP codes in South Carolina exceed PFAS limits?

57 of 206 tested ZIP codes in South Carolina exceed EPA PFAS limits, representing 28% of tested areas. 327 ZIP codes remain untested.

What are the sources of PFAS in South Carolina?

Major PFAS sources in South Carolina include 13 military bases that used AFFF firefighting foam, 28 Superfund sites, industrial facilities, airports, and wastewater treatment plants.

How can I remove PFAS from my drinking water?

The most effective home filtration methods for PFAS removal are reverse osmosis (RO) systems and granular activated carbon (GAC) filters. NSF/ANSI 53 or 58 certified filters can reduce PFAS by 90%+. Pitcher filters are less effective than point-of-use RO systems.

What is the EPA limit for PFAS in drinking water?

The EPA finalized national drinking water standards in 2024: 4 parts per trillion (ppt) for PFOA and PFOS individually, and a Hazard Index for mixtures of PFHxS, PFNA, HFPO-DA, and PFBS. Public water systems must comply by 2029.

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