this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2026
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I've always been under the childlike impression that my tap water is clean clean, but when thinking about it today I realised that it's unlikely that tap water is completely sterile, certainly not by the time it reaches my house through miles of pipes. So, just how unsterile can it be and still pass muster with the local government?

If we accept a certain number of rodent hairs or cockroach shells in each helping of our processed foods, I can only imagine what's considered acceptable when it comes to tap water.

For reference, I'm in N. Ireland, which is, regrettably, the UK. But obviously the island of Ireland is where my water comes from. From this nightmarish swamp, to be precise.

Stay moist, hydrohomos.

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[–] sbeak@sopuli.xyz 2 points 3 days ago

Depending on where you live, you could have great tap water or terrible stinky tap water. Generally, developed countries (UK, Ireland, etc.) have better quality tap water (due to better infrastructure, cleaner working conditions, etc.) but it could even vary between whether you're somewhere rural or urban. If the tap water doesn't make you sick, doesn't look muddy, doesn't smell, etc. you are probably fine (and if you're extra-cautious, you can test tap water for concentrations in certain minerals and such). You can always grab a water filter if your tap water is bad.

If you're wondering how tap water can stay clean, there are a bunch of steps to treat unclean water. There is coagulation, which clumps dirt and other particles into larger, easier to remove particles using various chemicals. Then there is flocculation, which makes the particles even bigger, turning them into "flocs", through mixing. Then there is sedimentation, which is basically where the flocs are so big they sink and form a sediment at the bottom. After that, you have filtration (which removes even more particles) and disinfection (which uses UV light, chlorine, or similar to kill microbes). I had to search for the specific words (coagulation and flocculation in particular), but I do remember the actual steps from geography lessons.