AGUACYCLE
North Carolina

Huntersville

Extreme (D3)Developing reusePop. ~52,704 · Chautauqua County

Huntersville, NC water profile — supply sources, drought status, wastewater reuse, and the key water issues facing the city.

Your water provider

crosswinds subdivision

groundwater (wells) · private · PWSID NY0622360

92
People served
0
Health violations (since 2016)
0
Unresolved violations
0.6 ppb
Lead 90th-pct (2025)

Below EPA's 15 ppb lead action level at last testing.

Source: EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) · 2026 Q1

Huntersville is a small but growing city and the 18th-largest in North Carolina, home to roughly 52,704 residents. Huntersville's drinking water comes largely from the same regional sources that serve North Carolina: rivers, reservoirs, and coastal aquifers.

As elsewhere in North Carolina, the central challenge is pfas contamination. The GenX/PFAS crisis on the Cape Fear River made North Carolina a national contamination case study.

North Carolina reuses an estimated 8% of its treated wastewater and maintains developing reuse programs; Huntersville tracks severe to extreme drought conditions on the U.S. Drought Monitor scale.

Explore the North Carolina profile for statewide context, or dig into the water issues shaping Huntersville below.

Chautauqua County water quality

1
Water systems
0k
People served
0
With violations
0
Over lead limit

Source: EPA SDWIS · 2026 Q1

At a glance

  • Population ~52,704 (18th-largest in North Carolina)
  • Primary sources: rivers, reservoirs, and coastal aquifers
  • Drought: severe to extreme conditions
  • State reuse rate: ~8% of wastewater

Statewide drought history

% of North Carolina in severe+ drought (Extreme (D3) now).

Source: U.S. Drought Monitor

Common questions

Is tap water safe in Huntersville?

Huntersville's largest water system, CROSSWINDS SUBDIVISION, serves about 92 people. EPA records show 0 health-based violation(s) since 2016 and a most-recent 90th-percentile lead level of 0.6 ppb (EPA action level is 15 ppb). Always check your own provider's annual Consumer Confidence Report.

Where does Huntersville get its water?

CROSSWINDS SUBDIVISION draws primarily from groundwater (wells), part of North Carolina's supply from rivers, reservoirs, coastal aquifers.

Related water issues