Lead pipes · Colorado
Lead pipes in Colorado
Lead pipes (EPA LCRR + RTI National Lead Pipe Map) data for ZIP codes in Colorado. Pick a ZIP below to dive into the lead pipes summary.
Last verified 2026-05-13 · methodology
What lands here
Pages show the utility's reported count of lead, galvanized-requiring-replacement, and unknown-material lines, plus the state's reporting compliance status.
Source & refresh
EPA LCRR + RTI National Lead Pipe Map. Refreshed quarterly as state primacy agencies report. Primary source →
Colorado top concern
Radon Zone 1, wildfire on the Front Range
Colorado is one of the most uniformly Zone 1 radon states in the US. WUI wildfire risk concentrates along the Front Range from Boulder to Colorado Springs. Drinking water sourcing splits between Front Range water districts and Western Slope reclamation projects, each with distinct EPA SDWIS compliance histories.
See Colorado state page for the full state-level rollup across all 12 dimensions.
Read more on lead pipes
Editorial deep-dives explaining the source data, its limits, and how to read it.
EPA Radon Zones — what 1, 2, and 3 mean and when you should test
EPA classifies every US county into Zone 1 (high), Zone 2 (moderate), or Zone 3 (low) for radon. Plain-English guide to the classifications and at-home testing.
Lead and Copper Rule 2024 — the federal lead-pipe inventory mandate
The 2024 Lead and Copper Rule Revisions (LCRR) require every US community water system to inventory and report lead service lines. Plain-English guide.
EPA SDWIS — how to read drinking-water violations and what they actually mean
Plain-English guide to EPA SDWIS drinking-water violations: health-based vs. monitoring vs. reporting violations, MCLs, and what triggers a public notice.
Radon and real estate — what disclosure laws and home tests actually require
What home sellers must disclose about radon by state, when home tests are required, and how to interpret radon-mitigation systems if a home you're buying has one.