Is Your Tap Water Safe? Complete Borough-by-Borough Guide
Safe to Drink
Meets all UK standards
Very Hard
280-350mg/L typical
Chlorinated
For disinfection
Living in London and wondering about your tap water? You're not alone. With Thames Water regularly in the news—from sewage spills to infrastructure issues—it's natural to question what's actually coming out of your tap.
Here's the good news: London tap water is safe to drink. It meets all UK and EU drinking water standards, and Thames Water conducts over 500,000 tests annually. But "safe" doesn't mean "perfect"—London water has some characteristics that many residents find frustrating.
In this guide, I'll break down exactly what's in London's water, how it varies by borough, and whether you should consider filtering it.
Meets All Safety Standards
99.96% compliance with DWI regulations
No Added Fluoride
Unlike some UK regions
Mineral-Rich
Calcium and magnesium (from hardness)
Extensively Tested
500,000+ tests per year
Very Hard Water
Causes limescale buildup
Chlorine Taste/Smell
Added for disinfection
Potential Lead (Old Properties)
From pre-1970s pipes
Trace PFAS Detected
Within legal limits but present
| Borough | Hardness | Rating | Main Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Westminster | 320mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Tower Hamlets | 310mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Camden | 305mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Hackney | 315mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Islington | 300mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Southwark | 295mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Lambeth | 290mg/L | Very Hard | Thames/Aquifer |
| Greenwich | 285mg/L | Hard | Thames |
| Lewisham | 280mg/L | Hard | Thames |
| Croydon | 295mg/L | Very Hard | Aquifer |
| Bromley | 290mg/L | Very Hard | Aquifer |
| Richmond | 275mg/L | Hard | Thames |
Data based on Thames Water reports. Check your exact postcode at Thames Water's water quality checker
Thames Water has removed lead from their mains network, but if your property was built before 1970, you may still have lead pipes connecting your home to the mains or within your internal plumbing.
High-risk London areas include Victorian and Edwardian properties in boroughs like Islington, Camden, Hackney, and parts of South London. If you're in a pre-1970s property, I'd strongly recommend either testing your water or using a filter certified for lead removal.
Let's address the elephant in the room: Thames Water has been in the news for all the wrong reasons—sewage spills, debt problems, potential nationalisation. Does this affect your drinking water quality?
The short answer is no. Drinking water treatment and sewage handling are separate operations. Thames Water's drinking water quality remains excellent (99.96% compliance) even as their sewage infrastructure struggles. The Drinking Water Inspectorate (DWI) monitors this independently.
That said, I understand the trust issue. When a company is clearly struggling with basic infrastructure, it's natural to question everything. If you want extra peace of mind, a home water filter gives you that final layer of control.

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Yes, London tap water is legally safe to drink and meets all UK and EU drinking water standards. Thames Water treats and tests it extensively. However, it's very hard (over 300mg/L calcium carbonate in most areas), contains chlorine for disinfection, and may pick up lead from old pipes in pre-1970s properties. Many Londoners choose to filter for taste improvement.
London's water is hard because it's drawn from chalk aquifers and the River Thames, which flows through limestone and chalk geology. As water passes through these rocks, it absorbs calcium and magnesium minerals. Most London boroughs have water hardness of 280-350mg/L (very hard), compared to the UK average of around 200mg/L.
London's mains water supply doesn't contain lead—Thames Water removed lead pipes from their network. However, if your property was built before 1970, you may have lead pipes connecting your home to the mains (the 'communication pipe') or internal lead plumbing. This is the main source of lead in London tap water. You can check by looking at pipes under your kitchen sink—lead pipes are dull grey and soft enough to scratch with a coin.
Most London boroughs have very hard water (280-350mg/L). Central and East London (Westminster, Tower Hamlets, Hackney) tend to be slightly harder than outer boroughs. You can check your exact postcode on Thames Water's website or use a home test kit. Hard water isn't a health risk but causes limescale buildup in kettles and appliances.
It depends on your concerns. For taste improvement and chlorine removal, a simple carbon filter (£50-100) is sufficient. If you have lead pipes, want to remove PFAS, or want to reduce limescale in drinking water, consider a reverse osmosis system. If you're happy with the taste and don't have lead pipes, filtering isn't necessary for safety.
No, Thames Water does not add fluoride to London's water supply. Unlike some other UK regions (parts of the Midlands and North East), London water is not fluoridated. Any fluoride present is naturally occurring at very low levels (typically 0.1-0.2mg/L), well below the 1mg/L level used in fluoridated areas.
Answer a few questions about your London property and water concerns, and I'll recommend the best filter for your situation.
Get Personalised AdviceWater Filtration Specialist | 24+ Years Experience
Keith has installed water filtration systems across London for over two decades, from Victorian terraces in Islington to modern flats in Canary Wharf. He knows London's water challenges firsthand.
Read full bioWater quality data based on Thames Water reports and DWI annual reports. Borough-specific figures are approximate averages—check your exact postcode for precise data. Information correct as of January 2026.