Elyria
Elyria, OH water profile — supply sources, drought status, wastewater reuse, and the key water issues facing the city.
Elyria is a small but growing city and the 14th-largest in Ohio, home to roughly 53,775 residents. Elyria's drinking water comes largely from the same regional sources that serve Ohio: Lake Erie, Ohio River, and aquifers.
As elsewhere in Ohio, the central challenge is aging infrastructure. Lake Erie algal blooms, which once shut off Toledo's water, are a recurring quality threat.
Ohio reuses an estimated 3% of its treated wastewater and maintains minimal reuse programs; Elyria tracks no meaningful drought conditions on the U.S. Drought Monitor scale.
Explore the Ohio profile for statewide context, or dig into the water issues shaping Elyria below.
At a glance
- Population ~53,775 (14th-largest in Ohio)
- Primary sources: Lake Erie, Ohio River, and aquifers
- Drought: no meaningful conditions
- State reuse rate: ~3% of wastewater
Common questions
Is tap water safe in Elyria?
Elyria is served by community water systems regulated under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Statewide, 24.7% of Ohio's systems have a recent health-based violation. Check your provider's annual Consumer Confidence Report for local results.
Where does Elyria get its water?
Elyria draws from the same regional sources that serve Ohio: Lake Erie, Ohio River, aquifers.
Related water issues
Aging Infrastructure
Much of America's water infrastructure is decades past its design life, leaking trillions of gallons a year and demanding hundreds of billions in reinvestment.
ExplorePFAS Contamination
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances persist in water supplies for decades. New federal limits are forcing utilities nationwide to invest in advanced treatment.
ExploreAlgal Blooms
Nutrient pollution and warming water are fueling toxic algae outbreaks that can shut down drinking-water intakes — as Toledo learned in 2014.
ExploreLead Contamination
Millions of lead service lines still connect homes to water mains. After Flint, a national push — backed by new EPA rules — aims to rip them all out.
Explore