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Well water testing (annual)

Short definition

Annual well water testing is the WA Department of Health-recommended routine for every private well: a yearly mail-in test for total coliform and nitrates, plus a comprehensive heavy-metals panel every 3–5 years. Mortgage closings on private-well properties typically require fresh test results from a state-certified lab.

What it is

WA DOH recommends two layers of well-water testing for homeowners on private wells:

Annual — total coliform plus nitrate. Coliform tells you whether contamination is finding its way into the supply (cracked well cap, surface intrusion, septic too close). Nitrate tracks fertilizer or septic-derived contamination. Both are tasteless and odorless, and both can change without you noticing.

Periodic (every 3–5 years) — a full panel covering arsenic, lead, copper, iron, manganese, hardness, pH, sulfate, fluoride. These don’t change quickly, so a less-frequent comprehensive test makes sense. Areas with documented arsenic (eastern WA agricultural counties) should test arsenic annually.

The test itself is mail-in: you collect a sample per kit instructions, ship it to a state-certified lab, and get results back in 2–4 weeks. The standard panels are inexpensive enough that there’s no good reason to skip them.

Why it matters to a homeowner

Three reasons routine testing is non-negotiable for a private well:

Closings depend on it. Lenders — especially FHA, VA, and USDA — require a fresh coliform (and sometimes nitrate, arsenic) test at closing on private-well properties. A last-minute test that fails delays the closing. Homeowners who test annually have current results in hand and avoid the scramble.

Vulnerable people in the household. Infants under 6 months, immunocompromised individuals, and elderly residents all face higher consequences from contamination. Annual testing catches problems before someone gets sick.

The pathway you can’t see. A cracked well cap, a septic field that’s settling closer to the well, an aquifer level dropping during a dry summer — all of these change the contamination risk without changing how the water tastes. Testing makes the invisible visible.

When you’ll encounter this term

  • Annual fall maintenance: schedule the mail-in test
  • Pre-listing: order the test 2–4 weeks before listing so results are in hand and any treatment can be deployed
  • Post-flooding event: shock chlorinate, then test
  • Buying rural property: include a water-test contingency in the offer; require seller to provide results from a state-certified lab
  • New baby in the home: fresh comprehensive test before mixing infant formula

Standard cadence and panel

Test Cadence Cost
Single-parameter coliform Annual $25–$60
Coliform + nitrate combined Annual $40–$80
Comprehensive heavy-metals panel Every 3–5 years $150–$400
Full standard panel (bacteriology + inorganic + metals) At well install or first occupancy $250–$500
Radon-in-water (radon-zone counties) At purchase, then every 5 years $30–$80

Common failure modes (homeowner mistakes)

  • Sample contaminated by tap or sample-bottle handling — false-positive coliform; lab requires repeat.
  • Wrong sample tap — using an outdoor hose-bib (subject to atmospheric contamination) instead of an indoor cold tap.
  • Incomplete flushing before sample — homeowner draws from stagnant line; result not representative.
  • Skipping for years, then surprised at sale — last-minute test fails, closing delayed.
  • Selecting an uncertified lab — results not accepted by lender or DOH.

How to take the sample correctly

  1. Use the kit’s sample bottle without rinsing it. The bottle has a preservative.
  2. Choose an indoor cold tap that gets regular use — kitchen sink is standard.
  3. Don’t use an outdoor hose bib, a swing-spout filter spout, or any tap with an aerator that’s hard to remove.
  4. Flush the cold side of the tap for 2–3 minutes before sampling to draw fresh water from the well.
  5. Don’t touch the inside of the bottle or cap. Don’t let the bottle contact the spout.
  6. Cap immediately and ship per kit directions, typically same-day or next-day delivery to the lab.

Common variants and disambiguation

  • Annual well test (private) vs. utility quarterly/monthly testing (public). Different rules, different scope. Public Group A systems test under WAC 246-290 schedules; private wells follow recommendation, not regulation.
  • Real-estate transaction test — minimal panel, often just coliform + nitrate.
  • Comprehensive baseline — done at well install or first occupancy; covers parameters that don’t change quickly (As, Pb, fluoride, hardness).

Washington note

WA DOH recommends — but does not regulate — annual coliform + nitrate testing for private single-family wells. Group B systems (2–14 connections, seasonal) follow WAC 246-291 with mandatory periodic monitoring; Group A (15+ connections) follow WAC 246-290.

For real-estate transactions: lenders typically require fresh coliform at closing on private-well properties. FHA, VA, and USDA loans have specific requirements that may go further (nitrate, arsenic, sometimes lead). The seller should provide test results from a state-certified lab.

To find a state-certified lab: check the WA DOH “Drinking Water Laboratories” list. Common WA-region labs include Pace Analytical, Edge Analytical, Tacoma Tap Lab, and Aqua Pure. Some utilities (Tacoma Water, Seattle Public Utilities) offer no-charge coliform testing for customers with concerns — different from a private-well test, but useful if you’re trying to compare results.