Read what to do.

Lead in drinking water

Lead in drinking water is a known health concern. There are no lead water mains in Ireland but there are still some lead pipes remaining in the public network.

Health risk of lead

Regular consumption of even low levels of lead can have negative health effects. The greatest health risk is for babies in the womb, infants and young children. Bottle-fed infants are especially at risk because they are fed with formula, which you make with drinking water.

The legal limit for lead in drinking water has been reduced over time. It is now at a very low level of 10µg/L or 10 microgrammes per litre.

How lead can get into drinking water

As drinking water leaves the treatment plant, it contains little or no lead. However, when drinking water comes in to contact with lead pipes, lead can dissolve into it. The amount of lead which dissolves into drinking water can depend on:

  • the length of lead pipework the water passes through
  • the length of time the water sits in the lead pipe
  • the temperature of the water
  • whether your water is hard or soft

Check your home or property for lead pipes

You can't taste, smell or see lead in drinking water. To check for lead pipes you should do two things:

  1. Look at the age and plumbing history of your property
  2. Inspect your existing pipes and fittings

Why the age of your property matters

Builders and plumbers often used lead for plumbing up to and including the 1970s. If your property dates from before 1970 and still has the original internal plumbing, you may have lead pipes or fittings.

How to inspect existing pipes

Find the water pipe where it enters your property and runs to the kitchen tap. Do this even if your internal plumbing has been upgraded or replaced, as this may still be a lead pipe. Then, use this guide to check the colour and appearance of the pipe. Try to inspect as much of the pipe as possible. If in doubt, contact your local plumber.

ColourAppearance / densityMaterial
Dark grey or black with a dull coating (unless painted)

Joints appear swollen

Shiny silver when scraped with a knife

Lead
Grey, black or blue Hard Plastic
Brown/orange colour, can be bright or dull Hard Copper
Dark, may be rusty Very hard Iron

Who is responsible for what pipes?

Test your water for lead

You can have your tap water tested for lead. You'll need to organise this yourself. We recommend you use an accredited laboratory. Find one through the Irish National Accreditation Board, the United Kingdom Accreditation Service (UKAS) or similar.

A single test for lead in water may not provide a full picture of lead levels in the property's drinking water. The amount of lead in water is influenced by factors such as:

  • pipe length
  • the standing time of the water
  • temperature
  • the chemical makeup of the water

If tests show lead in your drinking water, that doesn't mean the entire water supply is affected. The issue relates to the property, not the water supply.

Taking samples

You should take 3 samples of water from the tap.

  1. After the water has been sitting for at least 30 minutes, but preferably overnight.
  2. After running the tap for 1 minute.
  3. After running the tap for 5 minutes.

The results from this testing should give you a good idea if running the tap will reduce lead levels to within safe limits.

Precautions to take

Use these precautions if you think you have lead in your water and haven't fixed the issue. Boiling water doesn't remove lead from water.

Use the cold water tap or bottled water

  • Only take water for drinking, cooking and making baby formula from the cold water tap in your kitchen. Make sure that this water comes straight into your house from the water mains.
  • Don't drink water from the cold water tap in your bathroom as this usually comes from a tank in your attic.
  • Use bottled water. If you are making infant formula or food, avoid using bottled water labelled as Natural mineral water. This water can have high levels of sodium (salt) and other minerals. Natural mineral water can be used for a short time to prepare infant formula or food if no other water is available.

Run your water before use

The longer water has been sitting in the pipe, the more likely lead will dissolve into it. Run or flush the tap before using it for drinking or cooking. Doing this may lower the level of lead. However, the only way to know if this works is to have your water tested for lead before and after running the tap.

If flushing does not reduce lead

If testing shows that running your tap doesn't reduce lead levels below the 10µg per litre limit.

  • Use drinking water from another source, especially for pregnant women, bottle-fed infants and young children.
  • You can use the water for toilet flushing, showering and bathing, laundry and dishwashing.

Replacing lead pipes

You should replace any lead pipes or fittings inside your house.

Which pipes are your responsibility

You're responsible for the internal plumbing in your home and the connecting pipe from the outer edge of the property boundary. This is called the private side. Other types of connections, for example, where the connection is shared or comes through the back garden, exist but are rare. See who's responsible for which pipes.

Lead pipe replacement scheme

You can apply to have a lead public service connection pipe replaced free of charge. To qualify you must have replaced your lead private supply pipe.

Uisce Éireann and lead pipe replacement

We are replacing all remaining lead pipes in the public water network with plastic pipes. These are made of polyethylene. This work is part of Uisce Éireann's Leakage Reduction Programme.