E. coli in Drinking Water
Complete contaminant profile for Escherichia coli, including sources, health risks, testing methods, water safety response, treatment technologies, fecal contamination pathways, and drinking water guidance.
Quick Facts
What Is E. coli?
E. coli, or Escherichia coli, is a group of bacteria commonly found in the intestines of humans and warm-blooded animals. Many strains are harmless, but some can cause illness.
In drinking water safety, E. coli is especially important because it is used as an indicator of fecal contamination. Its presence in drinking water suggests that human or animal waste may have entered the water supply.
Why E. coli Matters in Drinking Water
The detection of E. coli in drinking water is treated as a serious warning sign. It may indicate that disease-causing organisms such as bacteria, viruses, or parasites could also be present.
Main Sources of E. coli Contamination
Sewage Contamination
Broken sewer lines, sewage overflows, or inadequate sanitation can introduce E. coli into surface water, groundwater, or distribution systems.
Livestock Runoff
Animal manure from farms, grazing areas, and feedlots can wash into rivers, wells, and reservoirs during rainfall or flooding.
Septic System Failure
Leaking or poorly maintained septic systems can contaminate nearby wells and groundwater with fecal bacteria.
Flooding and Stormwater
Heavy rain and flooding can carry fecal contamination into wells, rivers, lakes, storage tanks, and water distribution systems.
Potential Health Concerns
Health risk depends on the strain of E. coli, the amount ingested, and the vulnerability of the exposed person. Some strains may cause mild illness, while others can cause severe disease.
Common Symptoms
Exposure to harmful E. coli strains may cause diarrhea, stomach cramps, nausea, vomiting, fever, and dehydration.
Severe Illness
Certain strains, such as Shiga toxin-producing E. coli, can cause severe illness and may lead to serious complications, especially in children, older adults, and immunocompromised people.
Sensitive Populations
Infants, young children, elderly people, pregnant people, and individuals with weakened immune systems may be at higher risk from microbial contamination.
Regulatory and Monitoring Status
E. coli is widely used by water authorities as a key indicator of fecal contamination. Public water systems regularly test for microbial indicators, while private well owners are usually responsible for their own testing.
| Authority | Status | Use for Readers |
|---|---|---|
| EPA | Used in drinking water microbial monitoring and coliform rules | Check public water system notices and water quality reports |
| WHO | Key indicator organism for fecal contamination | Understand global microbial drinking water safety guidance |
| Local Health Agencies | Well testing, boil-water advisories, outbreak response | Follow local instructions when contamination is detected |
How E. coli Is Detected
- Presence/absence tests: used to determine whether E. coli is detected in a water sample.
- Membrane filtration: laboratory method that traps bacteria on a filter for analysis.
- Defined substrate tests: common testing systems that use color or fluorescence reactions.
- Private well testing: recommended after flooding, repairs, septic problems, or unexplained illness.
E. coli Treatment Methods
| Treatment Method | Effectiveness | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Boiling | Excellent | Effective emergency method for microbial contamination |
| UV Disinfection | Excellent | Effective when water is clear and the UV system is properly maintained |
| Chlorination | Excellent | Common municipal and emergency disinfection method |
| Microfiltration / Ultrafiltration | High | Can physically remove bacteria when properly designed |
| Activated Carbon Alone | Poor | Not reliable as a standalone microbial safety barrier |
| Reverse Osmosis | High | Can reduce bacteria but should be paired with proper maintenance and disinfection when microbial risk is present |
What To Do If E. coli Is Found
If E. coli is detected in drinking water, immediate protective action is recommended. Do not drink the water untreated until the contamination source is identified and the water is made safe.
- Use boiled or bottled water for drinking and food preparation.
- Do not use contaminated water for brushing teeth.
- Investigate possible contamination sources such as wells, septic systems, flooding, or pipe failures.
- Disinfect the system if appropriate.
- Retest the water before returning to normal use.
Recommended Safety Strategy
The best approach to E. coli risk is prevention, testing, and rapid response. For private wells, routine testing and inspection are essential. For public systems, boil-water advisories and utility notices should be followed carefully.
Related PureWaterAtlas Resources
Geographic and System Risk Factors
E. coli risk is higher where sanitation is inadequate, wells are poorly protected, septic systems fail, livestock runoff is present, flooding occurs, or water distribution systems lose pressure.
Risk can vary greatly by neighborhood, water source, season, rainfall, infrastructure condition, and household storage practices.
Practical Risk Reduction Steps
- Test private wells at least annually for coliform bacteria and E. coli.
- Retest after flooding, well repairs, or septic system problems.
- Protect wells from surface runoff and animal waste.
- Keep septic systems maintained and properly located.
- Use boiling or disinfection during suspected contamination events.
- Follow local boil-water advisories immediately.
Related Contaminants
Frequently Asked Questions
Is E. coli supposed to be in drinking water?
No. E. coli should not be present in safe drinking water.
Can boiling water kill E. coli?
Yes. Boiling is an effective emergency treatment for E. coli contamination.
Can E. coli be seen or smelled in water?
No. E. coli cannot be reliably detected by sight, taste, or smell. Testing is required.
Does a carbon filter remove E. coli?
Activated carbon alone is not a reliable microbial safety barrier unless part of a certified system designed for bacteria reduction.
Should private wells be tested for E. coli?
Yes. Private wells should be tested regularly and after flooding, repairs, nearby septic failures, or unexplained illness.
Authority Sources
Quick Summary
E. coli is a high-concern microbial indicator that signals possible fecal contamination in drinking water. Its presence means that harmful bacteria, viruses, or parasites may also be present. E. coli cannot be detected by sight, taste, or smell. Testing is required, and protective actions such as boiling, disinfection, source investigation, and retesting are essential when E. coli is found.