EPA July 2026 PFAS rules under public comment 45% of US tap water has at least one PFAS (USGS) 4.0 ppt PFOA and PFOS federal limit stands NSF/ANSI 42 + NSF 372 material safety Activated carbon adsorbs PFOA and PFOS Tested against P473 the PFOA and PFOS protocol CoreXchange filtration media EPA July 2026 PFAS rules under public comment 45% of US tap water has at least one PFAS (USGS) 4.0 ppt PFOA and PFOS federal limit stands NSF/ANSI 42 + NSF 372 material safety Activated carbon adsorbs PFOA and PFOS Tested against P473 the PFOA and PFOS protocol CoreXchange filtration media

2026 EPA drinking water update

Forever chemicals in your tap water? What the 2026 EPA decision means.

In May 2026 the EPA proposed to extend PFAS compliance deadlines and drop the limits on several PFAS, with a public hearing on July 7 and comments open through July 20. Here is what actually changed, what still stands, and what a carbon filter can honestly do at your tap.

4.0 ppt Federal PFOA and PFOS limit, unchanged by the 2026 proposals
NSF Certified NSF/ANSI 42 + NSF 372 material safety callouts
Made in the USA Pure XP + Nano XP filters are made in the USA
NSF/ANSI 42 + NSF 372 Calm, source-cited guide Comment period open to July 20

The quick picture

PFAS are man-made chemicals built to never break down, which is exactly why they end up in water and stay there.

PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are a family of thousands of chemicals used since the 1940s in nonstick pans, waterproof clothing, food packaging, and firefighting foam. Their carbon-fluorine bonds are among the strongest in chemistry, so they resist breaking down, which earned them the nickname forever chemicals. Over decades they have moved from factories, airports, and landfills into soil, groundwater, and the rivers and lakes that supply drinking water. A US Geological Survey study estimated at least one PFAS could be present in roughly 45% of US tap water, and in July 2026 an independent lab investigation found PFOA in more than a third of tap samples across Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Conventional treatment was not designed to remove them, which is why PFAS need specific filtration to reduce.

ppb ppt
Industry and foam factories, airports, landfills
Soil and groundwater PFAS do not break down
Source water where plants draw supply
01

They were built to last, which is the problem.

PFAS are prized in industry because they resist heat, grease, and water and do not degrade. That same durability means once they reach a water source they can stay for years, unlike contaminants that break down over time.

02

They are widespread, not rare.

A US Geological Survey study estimated at least one PFAS in roughly 45% of US tap water, and it tested for only 32 of the more than 12,000 PFAS that exist. This is a common-water issue, not a fringe one.

03

Treatment plants were not designed for them.

Conventional drinking water treatment targets pathogens and long-regulated chemicals. PFAS slip through unless a plant adds specific technology like activated carbon, reverse osmosis, or ion exchange, which is the same gap you can close at your own tap.

What the EPA proposed in 2026, and what still stands

The 2026 proposals extend deadlines and drop limits on some PFAS. The core PFOA and PFOS limit still stands.

In May 2026 the EPA proposed two related rules. The first would let water systems request two extra years, until 2031, to comply with the PFOA and PFOS limits set in 2024. The second would rescind the 2024 drinking water limits for four other PFAS: PFHxS, PFNA, GenX, and a hazard-index mixture. Two things matter for households. The enforceable limits for PFOA and PFOS themselves, 4.0 parts per trillion each, are not changed by these proposals. And both proposals were open for public comment: the EPA held a virtual hearing on July 7, 2026, and accepted written comments through July 20, 2026, under docket EPA-HQ-OW-2025-1742. Advocacy groups such as Earthjustice describe the package as a rollback, while the EPA frames it as more practical implementation. Either way, the details could still shift.

Epic water filter materials and certification visual
4.0 ppt federal limit for PFOA and PFOS, unchanged The 2024 enforceable limits for these two PFAS still stand.
2031 proposed new compliance deadline for utilities Systems could request two extra years to meet the limits.
4 other PFAS the EPA proposed to stop regulating PFHxS, PFNA, GenX, and a hazard-index mixture.
Jul 20 deadline for public comment in 2026 Virtual hearing July 7; docket EPA-HQ-OW-2025-1742.

The simple checklist

Three calm facts to hold onto about forever chemicals in your water.

1

The limits are strict for a reason

  • The federal limits for PFOA and PFOS are just 4 parts per trillion each.
  • That is among the lowest limits set for any drinking water contaminant.
  • It reflects research linking some PFAS to health effects at very low levels.
2

Your report may or may not show them

  • Utilities are still phasing in PFAS monitoring, so not every report lists it yet.
  • Check your annual water quality report and any state PFAS dashboard.
  • New national monitoring data is still rolling out under federal rules.
3

You can reduce exposure at the tap

  • Filters tested to reduce PFOA and PFOS lower exposure at the point of use.
  • Replace the filter media on schedule, since carbon stops working once exhausted.
  • Do not rely on boiling; it does not remove PFAS and can concentrate them.

What a filter can honestly do

For PFOA and PFOS, activated carbon is a recognized household reduction step, with honest limits.

The EPA lists granular activated carbon, reverse osmosis, and ion exchange as effective PFAS treatment technologies. At home, carbon block filters reduce longer-chain PFAS like PFOA and PFOS by adsorption, where the molecules stick to a vast internal carbon surface as water passes through. The honest boundaries matter: performance varies widely, and a Duke University study found home carbon filters cut PFAS anywhere from 0% to 73% depending on the filter and how well it was maintained. Short-chain PFAS are harder to capture, and carbon must be replaced on schedule or it stops working. Epic's Pure XP is independently tested against NSF/ANSI P473, the standard protocol for PFOA and PFOS reduction, on top of being NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for material safety. A filter supplements, and does not replace, your utility's treatment.

01
Adsorption mechanism The carbon fiber block grabs dissolved organic molecules, the family longer-chain PFAS like PFOA and PFOS fall into.
02
Tested against P473 Pure XP is independently tested against NSF/ANSI P473, the PFOA and PFOS protocol, and certified to Standard 42 + 372 for material safety.
03
Honest boundary Home carbon performance varies and depends on timely replacement; short-chain PFAS are harder, so treat carbon as a strong tool, not a cure-all.
Tap water in
Layer 1: Nano fiber media
Layer 2: Carbon fiber block core
Filtered water out

A look inside

The rules may change. Your tap does not have to wait.

Skip the panic Check your water report Filter at the tap Replace cartridge on schedule Comment by July 20

Choose your setup

Reduce what you can control. Start at your own tap.

Pure XP is independently tested against the PFOA and PFOS protocol. Use the direct buttons below to add the exact product to cart.

Epic Pure XP Pitcher
Recommended

Pure XP Pitcher

Broad everyday carbon filtration, independently tested against the PFOA and PFOS protocol.

  • Carbon fiber block adsorbs longer-chain PFAS like PFOA and PFOS
  • Independently tested against NSF/ANSI 53, 401, and P473
  • NSF certified to Standard 42 + NSF/ANSI/CAN 372
Buy Pure XP Pitcher
Epic Pure XP Dispenser
Best for families

Pure XP Dispenser

The same Pure XP filtration and P473 testing with more ready-to-pour capacity.

  • Same independently tested Pure XP media
  • Great for fridge or counter routines
  • Fits households that refill often
Buy Dispenser
Epic Nano XP Pitcher
Specialized pick

Nano XP Pitcher

For microbiological concerns and microplastics while maintaining fluoride.

  • NSF certified to Standard 42 + NSF/ANSI/CAN 372
  • Tested to reduce over 99.9% of microplastics
  • Maintains fluoride
Buy Nano XP
Epic Smart Shield Max under-sink water filter
Best under sink

Smart Shield Max

Tap-first filtration for kitchens where you want the counter clear.

  • CoreXchange double-layer media
  • Up to 750 gallons per filter
  • Under-sink convenience
Buy Smart Shield Max

Fast decision guide

Pick by routine, not by overthinking.

The report tells you what is in the system. The product decision is a daily-use problem.

Epic Pure XP water filter in everyday kitchen use
Pure XP
Choose this for broad everyday carbon filtration. Chlorine taste, disinfection byproducts, lead, and PFOA and PFOS.
Nano XP
Choose this for microbiological plus microplastics concerns. Good when fluoride retention is part of the decision.
Dispenser
Choose this when everyone in the house keeps refilling. Same simple behavior, more ready water.
Max
Choose this when you want filtration at the sink. Best for a cleaner counter and tap-first flow.
Need Pure XP Nano XP Max
Everyday carbon filtration Strong Strong Strong
No install Yes Yes No
NSF certifications 42/372 42/372 N/A

Quick answers

PFAS FAQ, minus the wall of text.

What are PFAS forever chemicals?

PFAS are a family of thousands of man-made chemicals used since the 1940s in nonstick coatings, waterproofing, and firefighting foam. They are nicknamed forever chemicals because their carbon-fluorine bonds do not break down easily, so they persist in the environment and can build up in water and in the body. A US Geological Survey study estimated at least one PFAS could be present in roughly 45% of US tap water.

What did the EPA decide about PFAS in 2026?

In May 2026 the EPA proposed two rules. One would let water systems request two extra years, until 2031, to meet the PFOA and PFOS limits. The other would rescind the 2024 drinking water limits for four other PFAS: PFHxS, PFNA, GenX, and a hazard-index mixture. The enforceable 4.0 parts-per-trillion limits for PFOA and PFOS themselves are not changed. A virtual public hearing was set for July 7, 2026, and written comments were open until July 20, 2026.

Should I be worried about PFAS in my tap water?

PFAS are worth taking seriously because they persist and because health research links some of them to effects at very low levels, which is why the federal limits for PFOA and PFOS are set at just 4 parts per trillion. That said, panic is not the goal. Check whether your utility has tested for PFAS, read your water quality report, and consider a point-of-use filter tested to reduce PFOA and PFOS if you want to lower exposure at your tap.

Does a water filter remove PFAS?

The EPA lists granular activated carbon, reverse osmosis, and ion exchange as effective PFAS treatment technologies. At home, carbon block filters reduce longer-chain PFAS like PFOA and PFOS by adsorption, but performance varies: a Duke University study found home carbon filters cut PFAS anywhere from 0% to 73% depending on the filter and how well it was maintained. Short-chain PFAS are harder to capture, and carbon must be replaced on schedule or it stops working.

Is Epic Pure XP tested for PFAS?

Pure XP is independently tested against NSF/ANSI P473, the standard protocol for PFOA and PFOS reduction, along with Standards 53 and 401. It is also NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for material safety and lead-free compliance. Tested against a standard and NSF certified to a standard are different things: the P473 result is independent performance testing, not an NSF performance certification.

Does boiling water remove PFAS?

No. Boiling does not remove PFAS and can actually concentrate them as water evaporates. PFAS are removed by specific treatment such as activated carbon, reverse osmosis, or ion exchange, not by heat.

Are the PFOA and PFOS limits going away?

Not under the 2026 proposals. The enforceable 4.0 parts-per-trillion limits for PFOA and PFOS remain in place. The proposals would extend the compliance deadline for utilities to 2031 and would rescind the separate 2024 limits for four other PFAS. Both proposals were open for public comment through July 20, 2026, so details could still change.

Ready to make it simple?

You cannot control the source water. You can filter at your tap.

Pure XP for broad everyday carbon filtration, independently tested against the PFOA and PFOS protocol. Nano XP for microbiological and microplastics priorities. Dispenser for more household capacity.

The EPA's two 2026 PFAS proposals, one to extend the PFOA and PFOS compliance deadline to 2031 and one to rescind the 2024 limits for PFHxS, PFNA, GenX, and a hazard-index mixture, are summarized from the EPA's Compliance Extension Rule and PFAS Rescission Rule pages, the Federal Register notice (May 20, 2026), and analysis from Earthjustice. The public hearing was held July 7, 2026, with comments open through July 20, 2026 (docket EPA-HQ-OW-2025-1742); the 4.0 ppt PFOA and PFOS limits are unchanged by these proposals. The estimate that at least one PFAS is present in roughly 45% of US tap water is from a US Geological Survey study. Home carbon filter PFAS performance ranging from 0% to 73% is from Duke University and North Carolina State University research; the EPA lists activated carbon, reverse osmosis, and ion exchange as PFAS treatment technologies in Reducing PFAS in Drinking Water. 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; Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for material safety and is independently tested against NSF/ANSI 53, 401, and P473 for performance, which is not an NSF performance certification. Review each product page and testing documentation for exact standards, claims, and contaminant lists. A point-of-use filter supplements, and does not replace, your utility's treatment or any advisory instructions. Boiling does not remove PFAS. Product performance can vary by water quality, usage, and filter replacement schedule. Last updated July 2026.