Hardin County Water District #2
Elizabethtown, Kentucky · PWSID: KY0470175
Elizabethtown Water Quality Summary
Hardin County Water District #2 supplies drinking water to about 76,326 people in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and draws from surface water (rivers, lakes, or reservoirs), which requires fuller treatment for runoff, sediment, and microbial risk. On the IsWaterSafe scale it earns a fair Water Safety Score of 79 out of 100 (Grade C), a composite of its EPA SDWIS violation and contaminant record.
This system has no health-based violations on record, but EPA logs 3 monitoring violations — failures to test or report water quality on schedule rather than confirmed contamination. 6 enforcement actions are recorded against the system.
Across the single substance sampled, none exceeded its EPA limit. Total Coliform (TCR) sits highest relative to its ceiling, detected at 2.5 % positive against an MCL of 5 % positive (sampled July 2021) — within the legal limit.
The most recent documented episode is a monitoring violation involving Total Coliform (TCR), beginning July 2021 and marked resolved June 2022.
Track Hardin County Water District #2
Subscribe for WaterSafety updates by email. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
Detected Contaminants
| Contaminant | Detected Level | MCL (Limit) | Status | Sample Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Coliform (TCR) | 2.5 % positive | 5 % positive | Within Limit | Jul 1, 2021 |
Violation History
Frequently Asked Questions
Hardin County Water District #2 has a Water Safety Score of C (79/100). The system serves 76,326 people and has 0 health violations on record. Check the contaminant table above for specific detected substances.
Hardin County Water District #2 has 0 contaminant exceedances above EPA health guidelines. See the full contaminant detection table above for all tested substances and their levels relative to legal limits and health guidelines.
The Water Safety Score (0-100, grades A through F) is based on contaminant levels relative to legal limits, health guideline exceedances, violation history, and enforcement actions. Higher scores indicate fewer concerns.
If your water system has violations, request the Consumer Confidence Report from your utility, consider getting an independent water test from a certified lab, and look into certified water filters for specific contaminants of concern. For lead, run cold water for 30 seconds before drinking.
Water quality data sourced from EPA's Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS). Safety scores are calculated based on contaminant levels, violations, and enforcement history. This is not a substitute for your utility's official Consumer Confidence Report.
Source: EPA Ground Water and Drinking Water, 2026.