Lead and dogs: is it safe in drinking water?
By Alexander Snyder, Founder & Water Quality Data Lead · Reviewed by the CheckYourTap editorial team
There is no established safe level of lead for dogs in drinking water — the goal is zero. Lead has no safe level for dogs or cats. The young of both species absorb far more ingested lead (up to 50%, vs 5–15% in adults) and have an immature blood-brain barrier.
Why dogs are different
Lead has no safe level for dogs or cats. The young of both species absorb far more ingested lead (up to 50%, vs 5–15% in adults) and have an immature blood-brain barrier. Because dogs drink far more water per pound of body weight than people, the same concentration delivers a higher dose.
The evidence pets are water sentinels
Heavy metals in dogs' drinking water (Dog Aging Project)
In a nationwide sample, 64% of dogs' drinking-water samples contained at least one heavy metal above an EPA maximum contaminant level; well-water users were at highest risk.
Sexton CL, et al. Testing for heavy metals in drinking water collected from Dog Aging Project participants. PLOS Water, 2025. PMC12463316.
Tap water and chronic kidney disease in cats
An observational study associated unfiltered tap-water consumption with a 3.43× higher odds of chronic kidney disease in cats; filtered water was associated with lower odds. This is an association, not proof of cause.
Piyarungsri K & Pusoonthornthum R. Risk and protective factors for cats with naturally occurring chronic kidney disease. J Feline Med Surg, 2016;19(4):358-363. PMC11119637.
Is lead in your water?
Enter your Connecticut ZIP code for a free report — it flags lead and what it means for your dog and the rest of your household.
Check your ZIP codeSee also: Lead in Connecticut water (for people).
More pet water safety
Frequently asked questions
Is lead in tap water safe for dogs?▾
Why are dogs more sensitive than people?▾
About these pet estimates
Pet drinking-water safe levels here are derived screening estimates, extrapolated from established human health standards (EPA, EWG, ATSDR) plus documented veterinary uncertainty factors and species water-intake ratios — not measured feline/canine drinking-water standards, which mostly do not exist. They are a reason to test and talk to your veterinarian, not a diagnosis or a substitute for veterinary care.
Reviewed by the CheckYourTap editorial team. Last updated July 2026.