Who provides Suwanee's tap water
Most Suwanee homes are served by the Gwinnett County Department of Water Resources, the county-run utility that treats and delivers water across Gwinnett. Your water bill names your provider, and our free lookup can help you confirm it for a specific address.
Unlike the systems in Cobb and much of Fulton that draw from the Chattahoochee River, Gwinnett's water comes from Lake Lanier, the reservoir behind Buford Dam and the county's sole drinking-water source. The county treats it at its own Lanier and Shoal Creek filter plants and delivers it through the pipes that serve Suwanee.
Soft water, and what that means for your home
Metro Atlanta's surface water is naturally soft, and the Lake Lanier water delivered in Suwanee is no exception. The utility's annual report lists the finished water's hardness, so you can read the current figure there. Soft water leaves little mineral scale in water heaters and on fixtures, so a whole-home softener is usually unnecessary in Suwanee.
Because hardness is usually not the local concern, homeowners who want to improve their water here tend to focus on taste and chlorine rather than scale. That is a comfort and preference decision, not a safety one.
How to read the official water report
Every community water system publishes an annual Consumer Confidence Report, or CCR, that lists the contaminants it tested for and whether the system met the federal standards for each one. Meeting a federal standard is a compliance floor set by the EPA, not the lowest level a home can achieve, which is why some homeowners still choose to filter further as a personal preference.
You can read Gwinnett County's most recent report on its water quality report page, linked in the sources below. To see the current report for a specific Suwanee address, along with the provider the system resolves to, you can also use our free water-quality lookup, which pulls the utility's own figures and links straight to the official report.
What the report cannot tell you about your home
A water report describes the water in the system overall, sampled before it reaches your street. It cannot see inside any one house, and a home's own plumbing can change what actually comes out of the tap.
According to the EPA, lead can enter drinking water inside a home when plumbing materials that contain lead corrode, and lead pipes, lead solder, and some older brass fixtures are more likely in homes built before 1986. Much of Suwanee is newer suburban construction, which lowers that likelihood, but some homes fall in the 1978 to 1995 window when polybutylene, a gray plastic supply pipe, was widely installed across Gwinnett. You cannot see, taste, or smell lead in water, so a licensed plumber can identify what your pipes and fixtures are made of and, if you want certainty, arrange a tap-water test.
Filtration options, if you want water beyond the standard
If you want to bring detected levels lower than the compliance floor, the common choices are a point-of-use reverse osmosis system under the kitchen sink for drinking and cooking water, and a whole-home carbon filter to reduce chlorine taste and odor at every tap. A softener is rarely needed here given how soft the water already is. Equipment that is independently certified, for example to an NSF/ANSI standard, is the reliable way to match a filter to a specific concern.
The right system depends on what you care about and on your home's own plumbing, which is why an in-home visit is where a plumber tests the water, sizes the equipment, and gives an exact quote. We do not promise specific resulting numbers for any one home before that visit.