Belmont, Belknap County
Well Water Treatment in Belmont, New Hampshire
Belmont sits just south of Laconia with frontage on Lake Winnisquam, and many homes here rely on private bedrock wells. A licensed local contractor can test your well and recommend the right system. Start with a free in-home water test and quote.
Why Belmont wells carry these contaminants
Belmont is a working Lakes Region town of about 7,300 people just south of Laconia, with frontage on Lake Winnisquam and the Tioga River running through it toward Silver Lake. It mixes a compact village center with rural roads where homes sit on their own wells.
Those wells draw from the same granite and metamorphic bedrock that underlies the rest of the Lakes Region, a natural source of arsenic, uranium, and radon. About 46 percent of New Hampshire residents rely on private wells, none of which are tested for them by any agency.
USGS arsenic mapping ties the metal to specific bedrock units rather than to any town boundary, so a Belmont well can carry arsenic regardless of the address. Testing is the only way to know, since arsenic is odorless and tasteless.
Around Belmont
- Lake Winnisquam
- Silver Lake
- Tioga River
- Belmont Village
- Sargent Lake
Water treatment services available in Belmont
These services are provided by the licensed local contractor you are matched with, sized to your Belmont well and your home.
Arsenic Treatment
The highest-intent concern on New Hampshire bedrock wells. A licensed contractor sizes a system to your water and the arsenic species present.
Learn moreUranium Treatment
Naturally occurring uranium turns up in parts of New Hampshire bedrock. A contractor typically addresses it with anion exchange or reverse osmosis.
Learn moreRadon in Water Treatment
Waterborne radon is distinct from airborne radon. On bedrock wells a contractor reduces it with aeration or activated carbon.
Learn moreIron and Manganese Treatment
Iron and manganese cause staining, taste, odor, and buildup. Treatment is often bundled with an arsenic or uranium system.
Learn moreWhole-House Water Treatment
Point-of-entry systems treat the water entering the whole home. This is the route to weigh when more than one contaminant is present.
Learn moreReverse Osmosis Systems
Point-of-use drinking-water systems at the kitchen tap, often paired with a whole-house system for the rest of the home.
Learn moreCommon well water issues in the Belmont area
Belmont wells commonly carry arsenic together with uranium and radon from the bedrock, and iron and manganese are widespread and leave rust and dark staining. A standard test checks for all of these so a contractor can match one system to the full picture.
How to test and treat your Belmont well
Testing is straightforward. You can send a sample to a New Hampshire accredited laboratory, order a test kit, or have the licensed local contractor we connect you with run a free in-home test. NHDES recommends a standard analysis every three to five years, with bacteria and nitrate tested yearly.
If you are buying or selling a Belmont home, water comes up at the closing table. New Hampshire requires sellers of one-to-four-family homes to disclose details about the private water supply, including the date of the most recent water test, and a separate state notification reminds buyers that radon and arsenic can occur in New Hampshire well water and that testing is recommended.
The treatment path is the same three steps everywhere we work: request a free in-home test, the contractor tests your Belmont water and reviews the results with you, and you receive a written, itemized quote with no obligation.
Nearby areas we serve
See all areas we serveBelmont well water questions
What contaminants are common in Belmont well water?
Arsenic, uranium, and radon from the granite and metamorphic bedrock are the main concerns, often alongside iron and manganese that cause staining. A standard analysis checks for all of these.
Is Belmont well water tested by the town?
No. Private wells are not tested or regulated by any agency, so testing is the homeowner's responsibility. You can use an accredited laboratory or a free in-home test from the contractor we connect you with.
How often should a Belmont well be tested?
NHDES recommends a standard analysis every three to five years, with bacteria and nitrate yearly, and a radiological test for radon and uranium every three to five years.
Sources
- U.S. Census Bureau, QuickFacts: Belmont, New Hampshire
- USGS, Estimated Probability of Arsenic in Groundwater from Bedrock Aquifers in New Hampshire (SIR 2012-5156)
- NHDES, Private Wells
- NHDES, Suggested Water Quality Testing for Private Wells (DWGB-2-1)
- New Hampshire RSA 477:4-d (private water supply disclosure)
- New Hampshire RSA 477:4-a (radon, arsenic, and lead notification)
Get your Belmont well tested
A licensed local contractor will test your water, explain the results, and give you a written quote. No obligation.