Independent community water quality initiative

Protecting Braintree's drinking water, one household at a time

We track federal EPA and Massachusetts DEP testing data for the Great Pond Reservoir System and help Braintree families understand what's really coming out of the tap — in plain language, sourced from public records.

Request a free water test

39,143
residents served by Braintree's Great Pond system
4.7 ppt
average PFOA level in 2023–24 EPA testing — above the federal 4 ppt limit
Jul 2026
new Tri-Town regional treatment plant begins service

What's really in your tap water?

Braintree's water comes from the Great Pond Reservoir System, a surface-water supply that has served the town since the 1930s. Water flows from the Upper Reservoir (fed by Narroway Brook) by gravity into the Lower Reservoir and then the Treatment Plant, with the Richardi Reservoir on the Farm River available as a backup source. Surface water like this carries more natural organic matter than a groundwater well, which is why Braintree's plant runs a heavier treatment train — coagulation, filtration, and chlorination — than many neighboring systems, and why chlorine taste can be more noticeable straight from the tap.

EPA's Fifth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR5), run in 2023–2024, found five PFAS "forever chemical" compounds in Braintree's testing results. None of this represents a current EPA violation. But the average PFOA reading over that testing window, 4.7 parts per trillion, sits above the EPA's own individual health-based limit of 4 ppt for that specific compound.

CompoundAverage level (2023–24)EPA individual limit
PFOS7.6 ppt4 ppt
PFOA4.7 ppt4 ppt
PFPeA4.0 ppt
PFHxA3.7 ppt
PFBS3.0 ppt

Source: EPA UCMR5 occurrence data, 2023–2024, as reported in Braintree's 2025 Consumer Confidence Report. See the full breakdown and methodology on the Water data page.

Sunset Lake in Braintree, Massachusetts, one of the town's surface water bodies
All Souls Church in Braintree, Massachusetts

Built by Braintree neighbors, for Braintree neighbors

Braintree Water Watch is a volunteer-run initiative started by residents who wanted a plain-language, independent source for what federal and local testing actually shows about the town's water supply — separate from the utility's own reporting.

We read the Consumer Confidence Reports so you don't have to, track new EPA monitoring data as it's published, and help neighbors figure out whether their household should be doing anything differently — including during the transition to Braintree's new regional treatment plant.

Read our story

Concerned about your household's water?

Request a free in-home water test and a volunteer will follow up to walk through what your results mean.

Get a free water test