The Santa Clara City Water Department, under the Division of Santa Clara City Public Works provides water for about 8,000 residents living
in the Santa Clara area. Established in 1854, the Santa Clara Water Department is part of the Snow Canyon Compact Well System with St. George City, of which Santa Clara City fully owns the two and part-owns the five of the seven wells. Santa Clara City Water collects its supply from ground water sources which includes Gunlock wells, Snow Canyon wells, and Quail Lake water treatment plant. The Department also
purchases additional water from St. George City and the Washington County Water Conservancy.

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Santa Clara Drinking Water Quality

Consumer Confidence Water Quality Reports

Under the authority of the Safe Drinking Water Act, the EPA requires Santa Clara Utilities to assess local water quality each year and distribute a Consumer Confidence Water Quality Report. At WaterZen, we review these reports and make the information available, in a concise, straightforward, and easy-to-understand way.

Lead Report (2018)

A

WaterZen Rating

Lead levels in the drinking water of some cities across the United States are too high, potentially creating public-health issues for the people living in those areas.

What about Santa Clara City Water? How much lead is in your drinking water? And how do those levels compare to other cities in the state? We examined data from hundreds of cities across the nation to understand and grade your water quality.

As you can see, Santa Clara City Water received the best-possible grade because the amounts of contaminants found in the water supply were better than the Public Health Goal and most other water providers we've analyzed.

Lead Report (2018)

A

WaterZen Rating

Lead levels in the drinking water of some cities across the United States are too high, potentially creating public-health issues for the people living in those areas.

What about Santa Clara City Water? How much lead is in your drinking water? And how do those levels compare to other cities in the state? We examined data from hundreds of cities across the nation to understand and grade your water quality.

As you can see, Santa Clara City Water received the best-possible grade because the amounts of contaminants found in the water supply were better than the Public Health Goal and most other water providers we've analyzed.

Contact Santa Clara Utilities Customer Service

Have a Question, Issue or Comment?

Main Customer Service

Physical Address:
2603 Santa Clara Drive
Santa Clara, Utah 84765

435-673-6712
"No email provided. Please visit the contact form." (http://santaclaraca.gov/government/departments/finance/my-utilities-account/contact-us)

Emergency (24 hours - broken water main or pipeline, etc.)
435-673-6712

Pay Your Santa Clara City Water Bill

Already have an account?

If you already have an account, you just need to login to the Santa Clara City Water site. Santa Clara City Water accepts credit cards, debit, and direct deposit. Click here to login.

Want to create a new account?

You can create a new account on the Santa Clara City Water website. Once you create the account, you can setup payment with credit, debit, or direct deposit. Click here to create an account.

Want to pay without an account?

You can make a one-time payment without creating an account. You will need to have your credit or debit card in order to make the one time payment. Click here to make a one time payment.

How to Start Santa Clara Water Service

Starting Your Service

When you move to a new home in Santa Clara, you'll most likely already have running water, but you'll still need to set up water service with the Santa Clara City Water. Luckily, Santa Clara has made it pretty simple with the following online form. Starting service generally takes just two business days.

Click here to fill out a Start Service Form.

Stopping Your Service

When you move out of a home in Santa Clara, you'll need to stop your water service with the Santa Clara City Water, so you don't keep getting billed. Simply fill out the following online form. Stopping service normally takes just two business days.

Click here to fill out a Stop Service Form.

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