It is scheduled maintenance, not a warning.
Utilities plan these switches in advance and post the dates. A stronger chlorine smell during a posted switch window is expected behavior, not a sign that anything is wrong with your water.
2026 summer water update
Each summer many US utilities briefly switch from chloramine to free chlorine to clean out their pipes, so your tap can smell like a swimming pool for a few weeks. Here is why it happens, whether the water is safe, and how a carbon filter fixes the taste.
The quick picture
Every year many water utilities temporarily change how they disinfect, usually switching from chloramine, a longer-lasting blend of chlorine and ammonia, to plain free chlorine for a few weeks. Systems often schedule this for spring or summer because warm temperatures make it easier for films and bacteria to build up inside miles of distribution pipes, and a short free-chlorine period helps clean the system out. It is routine maintenance, not an emergency. In 2026 you can see it on the calendar: Greenville Utilities in North Carolina ran its annual switch from June 16 through July 28, Tampa switched from May 29 to June 19, and several Texas cities including Cedar Park and Round Rock planned an August switch. The water stays safe to drink the whole time. What changes is the taste and smell, because free chlorine has a stronger, more pool-like odor than the chloramine you are used to.
Utilities plan these switches in advance and post the dates. A stronger chlorine smell during a posted switch window is expected behavior, not a sign that anything is wrong with your water.
Chloramine holds a milder odor across long pipe networks. Free chlorine is more volatile and pool-like, so it does the same disinfecting job but is far more noticeable at the tap.
Heat speeds biological growth inside distribution lines, so many systems schedule the free-chlorine period for spring or summer to keep the network clean when it matters most.
What is actually happening in the pipes
Most large US utilities disinfect with chloramine because it stays stable across long pipe networks and forms fewer disinfection byproducts. The tradeoff is that chloramine can let a process called nitrification take hold inside the pipes, so systems periodically switch to free chlorine, a stronger and faster-acting disinfectant, to reset the distribution network. The practice is well established, especially in warm climates, and your water stays safe to drink and use. Two groups do need to take specific steps during a free-chlorine period, and utilities call them out every time: kidney dialysis centers must adjust how they treat water, and anyone with a fish tank, pond, or aquarium needs to dechlorinate as usual, because chlorine is harmful to fish. For everyone else the practical question is simply taste and odor, and that is exactly what an activated carbon filter is built to handle.
The simple checklist
What a filter can honestly do
This is one of the cleanest matches between a real problem and what a carbon filter is designed to do. Activated carbon reduces chlorine taste and odor by adsorption and by breaking free chlorine down as water passes through the media, which is why nearly every taste-and-odor filter on the market is carbon based. It is also the aesthetic effect covered by NSF/ANSI Standard 42, and Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 along with NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for lead-free materials. One honest nuance: free chlorine, the kind used during the summer switch, is actually easier for carbon to reduce than chloramine, which is more stubborn and needs more contact time. So if anything, a good carbon filter shines during the free-chlorine weeks. A filter improves taste and odor at your tap; it does not replace your utility's disinfection, and you should still follow any specific advisory your utility posts.
A look inside
Choose your setup
Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 for chlorine taste and odor. Use the direct buttons below to add the exact product to cart.
Broad everyday carbon filtration that reduces chlorine taste and odor.
The same Pure XP carbon filtration with more ready-to-pour capacity.
For microbiological concerns and microplastics while maintaining fluoride.
Tap-first filtration for kitchens where you want the counter clear.
Fast decision guide
The switch tells you what changed in the system. The product decision is a daily-use problem.
Quick answers
The most common reason in summer is that your utility temporarily switched from chloramine to free chlorine to clean out its distribution pipes. Free chlorine has a stronger, more pool-like odor than the chloramine most systems use year round. These switches are planned, posted in advance, and usually last two to four weeks. The water stays safe to drink; what changes is mainly the taste and smell.
Yes. Both chlorine and chloramine are EPA-approved drinking water disinfectants, and utilities run these temporary switches as routine maintenance, not because of contamination. The water stays safe to drink and use throughout. Two groups do need to take action: kidney dialysis centers must adjust their water treatment, and fish or aquarium owners need to dechlorinate as usual, because chlorine is harmful to fish.
Many systems disinfect with chloramine most of the year because it stays stable across long pipe networks. Over time that can allow a process called nitrification inside the pipes, so utilities periodically switch to free chlorine, a stronger disinfectant, to reset the system. Warm weather speeds biological growth in distribution lines, so the free-chlorine period is often scheduled for spring or summer.
Most temporary switches run about two to four weeks, though the exact window varies by utility. In 2026, for example, Greenville Utilities in North Carolina scheduled its switch from June 16 through July 28, and Tampa ran one from May 29 to June 19. Your utility posts the start and end dates, so check its website or notifications to see when your area's period ends.
Yes. Activated carbon is the standard, well-proven way to reduce chlorine taste and odor, which is the aesthetic effect covered by NSF/ANSI Standard 42. Epic's Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 for chlorine taste and odor, along with NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for lead-free materials. Free chlorine, the type used during summer switches, is actually easier for carbon to reduce than chloramine, so a good carbon filter works well during these weeks.
Boiling, or simply letting water sit in an open pitcher in the fridge, does help free chlorine off-gas, so the smell fades. But boiling is not necessary since the water is already safe, it uses energy, and it is less effective on chloramine, which does not evaporate as readily. An activated carbon filter is the simpler, more consistent fix for taste and odor at the tap.
These are the two groups utilities always warn during a free-chlorine switch. Kidney dialysis centers must adjust how they treat and monitor water, so anyone on home dialysis should follow their clinic's guidance. Fish, aquarium, and pond owners should dechlorinate water as they normally would, because chlorine and chloramine are both harmful to fish. A standard drinking water pitcher is not a substitute for these dedicated steps.
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Pure XP for chlorine taste and odor and everyday carbon filtration, NSF certified to Standard 42. Nano XP for microbiological and microplastics priorities. Dispenser for more household capacity.
Temporary utility switches from chloramine to free chlorine are a routine, well-documented practice; 2026 examples and dates are drawn from utility notices including Greenville Utilities Commission (annual switch June 16 through July 28, 2026), the City of Tampa temporary change (May 29 through June 19, 2026), and coordinated Central Texas switches such as Cedar Park and neighboring cities (beginning August 3, 2026). The U.S. CDC and EPA describe both chlorine and chloramine as approved drinking water disinfectants and note that dialysis facilities and fish or aquarium owners must take specific steps during a switch; see the CDC and EPA chloramines pages. NSF/ANSI Standard 42 covers aesthetic effects including chlorine taste and odor. Product claims are based on Epic Water Filters published testing and certification information: Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for chlorine taste and odor reduction and lead-free materials. Review each product page and testing documentation for exact standards and claims. A point-of-use filter improves taste and odor and supplements, but does not replace, your utility's disinfection or any advisory instructions. Product performance can vary by water quality, usage, and filter replacement schedule. Last updated July 2026.