Earthy and musty is usually drought, not danger.
As reservoirs shrink, geosmin and MIB from natural organic matter concentrate. They taste unpleasant but are not considered harmful, and activated carbon is built to reduce them.
Drought and your tap water
A dry summer can leave tap water tasting earthy, musty, or more like chlorine. Pure XP is a carbon block filter built for exactly that: chlorine taste and odor and the organic compounds drought concentrates, plus broad everyday reduction.
The quick picture
Nearly half the country has been in drought this year, with North Carolina logging its driest stretch since 1895 and the Colorado River heading into a record-low year. When source water drops, what is left becomes more concentrated, and your tap can taste earthy, musty, or more like a pool.
As reservoirs shrink, geosmin and MIB from natural organic matter concentrate. They taste unpleasant but are not considered harmful, and activated carbon is built to reduce them.
Utilities often adjust disinfection on lower-quality, warmer source water, so a stronger chlorine taste or odor shows up. NSF/ANSI 42, which Epic carries, is the standard for reducing it.
A filter improves taste and many chemical concerns, but it is not a substitute for a utility advisory. If your area gets one, follow it first.
Why NSF 42/372 belongs on this page
NSF/ANSI 42 covers aesthetic effects like chlorine taste and odor, the exact thing that changes when source water runs low. NSF 372 verifies lead-free materials in contact with your water. Pure XP and Nano XP carry both, so you fix the flavor without adding a new material worry.
The simple checklist
Inside the filter
CoreXchange media is built around activated carbon, which is the textbook answer for the taste and odor problems drought creates. The story is simple: adsorption grabs the compounds behind that earthy, musty, or chlorine flavor, while the same media also targets a range of everyday chemical concerns.
A look inside
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Carbon block fridge filter for chlorine taste, earthy flavors, and broad everyday reduction.
More ready-to-pour, better tasting water for households that refill all summer.
For taste plus microbiological concerns while maintaining fluoride.
Tap-first filtration for kitchens where you want the counter clear.
Fast decision guide
Drought is a taste and odor problem. The product decision is a daily-use problem.
Quick answers
When reservoirs and rivers run low, naturally occurring compounds like geosmin and MIB become more concentrated, which gives water an earthy or musty taste and smell. Utilities also tend to adjust disinfection on lower-quality source water, so you may notice more of a chlorine taste or odor in summer. These taste and odor changes are usually aesthetic rather than a sign the water is unsafe.
In most cases, public water that meets federal standards is still safe to drink even when it tastes earthy or like chlorine. The taste and odor compounds common in drought, such as geosmin and MIB, are not considered harmful. Always follow any boil water notice or do not drink advisory from your local utility, since those address specific safety issues that a filter cannot replace.
Yes, this is exactly what activated carbon is designed for. Carbon block filters like Epic Pure XP are built to reduce chlorine taste and odor and many of the organic compounds that cause earthy and musty flavors. Reducing these aesthetic taste and odor effects is the core of the NSF/ANSI 42 standard our filters are certified to.
Drought can also concentrate inorganic contaminants like arsenic, uranium, and nitrate in some regions. Activated carbon is generally not the right tool for those, which typically require reverse osmosis or other specialized treatment. Cyanotoxins from harmful algal blooms are also not something a standard pitcher filter is designed to remove, so always follow your utility's guidance if a bloom advisory is issued.
NSF/ANSI 42 is the standard for aesthetic effects such as chlorine taste and odor, which is precisely what changes during a drought. NSF 372 verifies lead-free compliance for materials that come into contact with your drinking water. Epic Pure XP and Nano XP carry both.
A reusable filter usually costs far less per gallon than bottled water and avoids the single-use plastic. One Epic cartridge can replace the equivalent of over a thousand single-use bottles, which is a practical way to get better tasting water through a long, dry summer.
Replace your filter according to the recommended filter life to maintain optimal contaminant reduction and water flow. If your water has been tasting earthy or strongly of chlorine all summer, a fresh cartridge helps ensure your system keeps performing as designed.
Ready to make it simple?
Pure XP for chlorine taste and broad everyday filtration. Nano XP for taste plus microbiological concerns. Dispenser for more household capacity through a long, dry season.
Drought and water-quality background is summarized from the International Joint Commission and 2026 drought reporting on U.S. drought and drinking-water risk and North Carolina's record drought. Earthy and musty taste from geosmin and MIB is summarized from the U.S. Geological Survey and the Water Education Foundation. Activated carbon limitations for arsenic, uranium, and nitrate are summarized from University of Nebraska Extension and U.S. EPA HABs resources. NSF standards background is summarized from NSF consumer resources. Product claims are based on Epic Water Filters published testing and certification information. NSF certification and independent contaminant-reduction testing are not the same thing; review each product page and testing documentation for exact standards, claims, and contaminant lists. A water filter is not a substitute for a boil water or do not drink advisory. Product performance can vary by water quality, usage, and filter replacement schedule. Last updated June 2026.