About NM Well Water
This site exists because finding clear, reliable information about well water quality in New Mexico is harder than it should be.
Thousands of New Mexico families rely on private wells for their drinking water. Unlike public water systems, private wells aren't monitored or regulated by any government agency. That means well owners are responsible for testing their own water and understanding the results — but the information to do that is scattered across government PDFs, academic papers, and water treatment company marketing pages.
We built NM Well Water to put the most important information in one place: what contaminants are common in your area, where to get tested, what your results mean, and what your options are if something comes back high.
What This Site Is
- A starting point for understanding your well water
- Community-specific guides based on local geology, real water quality data, and government sources
- Links to certified testing labs, free testing programs, and local treatment companies
- Plain-language explanations of geology, contaminants, and treatment options
- A public information resource — not a sales funnel
What This Site Is Not
- A substitute for actual water testing (every well is different)
- Professional advice about your specific well or water system
- Affiliated with any government agency, water treatment company, or testing lab
Our Sources
The data on this site comes from government and academic sources, including:
- United States Geological Survey (USGS) — groundwater studies, water level monitoring, arsenic research
- New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) — drinking water quality data, private well testing programs
- New Mexico Bureau of Geology & Mineral Resources — basin hydrogeology, contaminant source studies
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — contaminant standards, private well guidance
- New Mexico Office of the State Engineer — well permits, water level data
- County environmental health departments — local testing data, well permit programs
We cite specific sources on each page. If you find an error or have better data, we want to know.
Every well is different. Two wells on the same street can have completely different water quality. The only way to know what's in your water is to test it.
Contact
Have questions, corrections, or suggestions? Reach us at hello@nmwellwater.com.