A marketing service connecting New Hampshire homeowners with licensed local water treatment contractors. Compass Camper LLC is not a contractor and does not perform water treatment work.

Laconia, Belknap County

Well Water Treatment in Laconia, New Hampshire

Laconia sits in the heart of the Lakes Region, where private wells draw from granite bedrock that can carry arsenic, uranium, and radon. A licensed local contractor can test your well and recommend the right system. Start with a free in-home water test and quote.

Why Laconia wells carry these contaminants

Laconia is the largest community in the Lakes Region, a city of about 16,900 people set between Lake Winnipesaukee and Lake Winnisquam, with Paugus Bay and Opechee Bay running through its center and the neighborhoods of Lakeport and The Weirs along the water. Roughly two-thirds of its occupied homes are owner-occupied, and much of the housing stock dates to the mid-1970s or earlier, before arsenic in New Hampshire bedrock was widely understood.

Homes outside the city water system draw from private wells in that bedrock. Statewide, about 46 percent of New Hampshire residents rely on private wells, and the granite and metamorphic rock under the Lakes Region is a natural source of arsenic, uranium, and radon. No agency tests a private well for you, so testing is the homeowner's responsibility.

USGS mapping ties arsenic to specific bedrock units rather than to town lines, and median arsenic in private bedrock wells is similar across New Hampshire counties. A Laconia well can carry it whether or not a neighbor's does, and because arsenic is odorless and tasteless, the only way to know your level is to test.

Around Laconia

  • Lake Winnipesaukee
  • Lake Winnisquam
  • Paugus Bay
  • Opechee Bay
  • Weirs Beach and Lakeport

Water treatment services available in Laconia

These services are provided by the licensed local contractor you are matched with, sized to your Laconia well and your home.

Common well water issues in the Laconia area

In the Lakes Region, the contaminants that travel with arsenic are usually the other products of the same bedrock. Uranium and radon are both naturally radioactive and common in deep bedrock wells, and iron and manganese, which stain fixtures and laundry, are common across New Hampshire. A standard Laconia well test looks for all of these together so a contractor can size one system to the whole picture.

How to test and treat your Laconia 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 Laconia 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 Laconia water and reviews the results with you, and you receive a written, itemized quote with no obligation.

Nearby areas we serve

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Laconia well water questions

Do Laconia homes on city water need treatment?

Laconia has a public water system, and this service is aimed at homes on private wells. If your Laconia home draws from a private well, a test is the way to know what is in your water. Public-water customers can request water-quality reports from their supplier.

Is arsenic a concern in the Laconia area?

Arsenic occurs naturally in the granite and metamorphic bedrock under the Lakes Region, and USGS mapping ties it to bedrock rather than to town lines. Because it is odorless and tasteless, a test is the only way to know a specific Laconia well's level.

How do I get my Laconia well tested?

You can use a New Hampshire accredited laboratory or request a free in-home test from the licensed local contractor we connect you with. NHDES recommends a standard analysis every three to five years.

Get your Laconia well tested

A licensed local contractor will test your water, explain the results, and give you a written quote. No obligation.

When you submit this form, your information is shared with a licensed local water treatment contractor for the purpose of scheduling your free in-home water test and quote.

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