Peterborough is supplied by Anglian Water. The water is hard (270 mg/L CaCO₃), meaning it has significant mineral content and notable limescale buildup in appliances. Enter your postcode for your exact zone's full report.
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Tap water in Peterborough is provided by Anglian Water, which serves Cambridgeshire. The water in this area is classified as hard, with a typical hardness of around 270 mg/L CaCO₃. This means significant limescale deposits on kettles, taps, and heating elements — a water softener or filter is often a worthwhile investment for households in this area.
UK tap water is among the safest in the world, with over 99.9% of tests passing legal standards each year. However, hardness levels, trace contaminants, and the presence of disinfection byproducts like trihalomethanes (THMs) vary significantly by zone — even within the same city. That's why it's worth checking your specific postcode.
Peterborough's water hardness of approximately 270 mg/L CaCO₃ places it in the hard category. Hard water is caused by chalk and limestone rock that water filters through before reaching the water table. In Peterborough, this is primarily from the chalk aquifer beneath the area.
For context, hardness below 60 mg/L is considered very soft, 60–120 is soft, 120–180 is slightly hard, 180–250 is moderately hard, 250–310 is hard, and above 310 mg/L is very hard. The UK average is around 150–200 mg/L.
UK tap water is safe to drink straight from the tap without filtration. However, at 270 mg/L CaCO₃, Peterborough's water is hard — a filter or water softener can significantly improve taste, reduce limescale, and extend the life of your appliances. Reverse osmosis systems remove the widest range of contaminants including nitrates, THMs, and any trace PFAS compounds.
Enter your postcode above to see zone-specific data — hardness, nitrates, lead, chlorine, fluoride and more — directly from Anglian Water's annual compliance report.
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