If you live in Miami-Dade County, you have access to an annual Water Quality Report (also called a Consumer Confidence Report or CCR). It’s one of the most useful homeowner documents you’ll ever get — but most people glance at the first page, see a few technical terms, and close the PDF.
This guide shows you how to read Miami’s CCR in about 10 minutes. You’ll learn what numbers matter, what is mostly about taste and odor, and how to turn the report into a simple filtration plan for your home.
If you want to pull up the report right now, Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department (WASD) publishes the annual "Drinking Water Supply and Quality Report" on its Water Quality Reports page. Start there, then use the steps below to read it efficiently.
Step 1: Confirm you’re reading the latest Miami-Dade CCR
Miami-Dade releases a Water Quality Report each year based on testing from the previous year. In April 2026, WASD announced it released its 2025 Water Quality Report (CCR), which is based on testing conducted throughout the prior year.
When you open the PDF, check the cover page for the report year, then look for the testing year (often stated near the introduction). If you’re comparing filtration options, you want the newest report available.
Step 2: Understand the four columns that drive the whole table
Most CCRs include a table with a handful of columns that look similar to:
- Contaminant (what was tested)
- Level detected (what they found)
- Range (variation across the year or sampling points)
- MCL / MRDL (the legal limit utilities must meet)
Here’s the homeowner shortcut: the report is not saying “your home has exactly this number.” It’s summarizing a large water system. Your neighborhood, building, and plumbing can change what you experience at the tap.
Step 3: Separate “aesthetic” standards from health-based standards
Some report items are mostly about taste, smell, and appearance. Others have more direct health relevance. The easiest way to spot aesthetic items is to look for the EPA’s Secondary Maximum Contaminant Levels (secondary standards) — these are non-enforceable guidelines meant to reduce nuisance problems like salty taste, staining, and odor.
For example, EPA secondary standards include:
- Chloride: 250 mg/L (salty taste)
- Sulfate: 250 mg/L (bitter taste; can have a laxative effect at high levels)
- Total Dissolved Solids (TDS): 500 mg/L (overall mineral/salt content that impacts taste)
- pH: 6.5–8.5 (corrosion control + taste)
These numbers help you interpret “why does my water taste different?” without jumping straight to worst-case conclusions.
Step 4: Look for the three homeowner sections people skip
The contaminant table gets all the attention, but three other CCR sections often matter more for Miami homeowners:
1) Source water and treatment description
This tells you the big picture: where the water comes from and what processes are used to treat it. That context helps you pick the right technology (carbon vs. reverse osmosis vs. softening).
2) Disinfectant type and residuals
Miami homeowners frequently notice taste and odor changes during disinfection changes or system maintenance. If you are sensitive to chlorine/chloramine taste, a certified carbon filter at the kitchen tap can make a dramatic difference.
3) Lead and copper information
Lead in drinking water is usually more related to in-home plumbing and fixtures than the treatment plant. That’s why CCRs include corrosion control information and lead sampling summaries. If your home is older or you’re unsure about plumbing materials, start with our guide: How to Check for Lead Pipes in Miami Homes.
Step 5: Turn what you read into a simple filtration plan
Most Miami households benefit from a two-part approach: improve drinking water first, then address whole-home comfort (showers, appliances, fixtures).
Option A: Better taste and cleaner cooking water (kitchen-only)
If your biggest priority is drinking water taste, odor, and general reduction of common contaminants, start with a point-of-use system at the kitchen sink. CrystalFlow’s Kitchen Guard package ( $699–$849 installed) is a Waterdrop system with NSF/ANSI 42, 53, and 58 certifications and is designed to reduce chlorine/chloramine taste and support broad contaminant reduction at the tap.
Option B: Whole-home comfort (scale + appliances) + kitchen purity
Miami’s water can still be hard even after treatment, and hardness is what drives scale buildup on showers, faucets, tile, and inside water-using appliances. If you’re seeing white crust on fixtures or fighting soap scum, you’ll likely want a whole-home solution for comfort plus a dedicated drinking-water system.
- Home Shield ( $1,799–$2,199 installed): reduces hardness for better showers and longer appliance life.
- Pure Life ( $2,699–$3,199 installed): for homeowners who want the most comprehensive contaminant reduction strategy for drinking and cooking water.
If you’re not sure which direction fits your home, start by measuring. Your CCR is a system-wide snapshot — your house is personal.
Step 6: Confirm your home’s numbers with a free water test
The fastest way to make the CCR useful is to combine it with on-site measurements. CrystalFlow Miami offers a free in-home water test that checks:
- Total dissolved solids (TDS)
- Hardness (grains per gallon)
- pH
- Disinfectant indicators (taste/odor drivers)
You get results during the visit, a clear recommendation, and no obligation.
The bottom line
Miami’s annual Water Quality Report is not just compliance paperwork. It’s a roadmap. Read it with the right filters in mind: what affects taste, what affects plumbing and appliances, and what affects drinking-water peace of mind.