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20,266 people served · 7 water systems
THOMASTON, Georgia is a small city with 20,266 residents served by a network of 7 public water systems. Water service covers ZIP code 30286.
THOMASTON's drinking water utilities have maintained full EPA compliance over the most recent five-year reporting window — no health-based MCL exceedances have been recorded.
Last updated: 2026-05-18 · Source: EPA SDWIS
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Centered on ZIP-code centroids of water systems serving this city.
EPA Maximum Contaminant Level exceedances reported by water systems serving THOMASTON. Each entry explains the contaminant, the health risk, and recommended precautions, and links to a full guide.
No health-based violations in the last 5 years.
THOMASTON's water systems have met EPA health-based Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) requirements throughout the EPA reporting window. This does not mean zero detection of regulated contaminants — it means all measured concentrations remained below their federal action levels.
THOMASTON
PWSID: GA2930000
12,482 served
ARROWHEAD LAKE WATER ASSOC.
PWSID: GA2930009
270 served
UPSON COUNTY
PWSID: GA2930010
5,243 served
UPSON CO.-LINCOLN PARK WS
PWSID: GA2930048
886 served
COUNTRY VILLAGE SUBDIVISION
PWSID: GA2930016
486 served
GRACE NEAL & VESTAVIA SD
PWSID: GA2930017
729 served
BUFFINGTON
PWSID: GA2930015
170 served
This overview reflects EPA SDWIS data published as of 2026-05-18. It covers active Community Water Systems (CWS) that remained within federal Maximum Contaminant Levels during the past five-year EPA reporting window. For up-to-the-minute information, request a current Consumer Confidence Report from your utility, or review the EPA's public dashboard.
This city's water had no EPA health-based violations in the last 5 years.
THOMASTON has 0 EPA health-based water violations in the last 5 years across 7 water systems serving 20,266 people.
Using an NSF-certified water filter is recommended if your area has violations involving lead, arsenic, or PFAS. For other contaminants, consult your local water utility. Check the annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) for detailed guidance.
Request your water utility's annual Consumer Confidence Report (CCR), which is required by the EPA. Follow the utility's guidance on boil water advisories. Run cold water for 30 seconds before drinking if you have older plumbing. Use an NSF-certified filter if needed based on your water system's violations.
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