🏠 Home πŸ’§ Water Quality πŸ§‚ Water Softeners 🚰 Reverse Osmosis 🏠 Whole-Home Filters 🌊 Well Water ✍️ All Articles ℹ️ About β†’ Check Your Water

πŸ“ DeKalb County Water Quality Report (2026)

Covering Fort Payne, Rainsville, Fyffe, Mentone, Collinsville. Updated with the latest utility data and the February 2026 Sierra Club PFAS findings.

Mix β€” Municipal utilities in Fort Payne/Rainsville; Private wells (rural ~55%)

C+
2026 Overall Score
Metric Reading Risk Level
Water Hardness13.0–16.0 GPGHigh
PFASLOW β€” No major point sourcesLow–Moderate
DisinfectantChlorine (city); Untreated (wells β€” ~55% of county)Standard
Primary ConcernsTannins (yellow/brown color from organic matter), iron/manganese, hardness, ~55% of homes on well water

🌿 Tannin Alert: DeKalb County has a higher prevalence of tannin contamination in well water than any other North Alabama county β€” a result of the county's abundant organic matter and specific soil composition. Tannins cause a yellow-brown tint and earthy odor that carbon filters alone cannot address. If your well water is discolored, request a tannin test and consider an anion exchange tannin filter as part of your treatment stack.

Our Recommendation for DeKalb County

Recommended system: Well water: sediment filter + tannin filter + iron filter + softener. City water: softener + carbon filter.

βœ” Recommendation reviewed by a 18-Year Water Treatment Professional

Read the Full System Guide β†’

Check Your Specific Address

County-wide data is a useful starting point, but your specific water source matters. Use our interactive diagnostic tool to get a recommendation based on your exact city, or run our free city diagnostic:

Open Diagnostic Tool β†’ All County Profiles

Ready to Improve Your Water?

Find the best system for your home in Fort Payne and surrounding areas.