How is the drinking water in the Philippines?
Well water? Delivered 5 gallon filtered or purified water? Any GI issues from drinking the water? Back in the 90's, we would drink beer instead of water when we go the China or S. Korea. Bottled water in Saudi. We trust the water in other developed countries.
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Jackson4 wrote:Do you trust tap water where you live?
Well water? Delivered 5 gallon filtered or purified water? Any GI issues from drinking the water? Back in the 90's, we would drink beer instead of water when we go the China or S. Korea. Bottled water in Saudi. We trust the water in other developed countries.
If you have a well in an urban area, chances are the water is not safe for drinking. If you have a well in the province with no close neighbors polluting the ground water with septic tanks or other contaminants, you may be ok, though testing it first for bacteria or other chemicals or metals might be advisable.
The tap water supplied by local water companies is not to be trusted for drinking. You can install an expensive filtration system (which requires maintenance) or buy bottled water or filtered water from a trusted local source who most often will deliver it.
If you buy from a local source of filtered water, make sure there equipment is kept up to date and it is advisable to wash your containers yourself before having them refilled.
My partner/kids have had no issue thus far with the unboiled stuff but I'd rather be safe than sorry.
Local beer & Coke are stocked up for emergencies.
manwonder wrote:Drinking water/as well as the sad state of drainage systems here is a huge problem, even though our 'trusted' local supplier also supplies his filtered ground water to many major local hotel chains...I will always reboil part of whatever I get in those refilled blue 5 gallon bottles (yes always cleaned by ourselves prior refill) and only then consume it.
My partner/kids have had no issue thus far with the unboiled stuff but I'd rather be safe than sorry.
Local beer & Coke are stocked up for emergencies.
The only tap water I drink is the coffee in my electric percolator. All other liquids for me are juices. (Grape, Orange, Tomato, Apple & Pineapple.) I also did this in the states.
All of my family, Filipinos, drink water that we have delivered.
In regards to septic & well water. In my younger days I live in Lombard, Illinois. We had well & septic. The area was unincorporated so no city water or sewage available. The well was 60 feet deep (18 meters). Septic systems are near the surface. If the wells are deep here I don't think there would be any cross contamination. The well water in Lombard had a lot of iron & sulfur. Everything was stained with rust from the Iron.
Some years later I built a house in Warrenville, Illinois (Now part of Naperville, Illinois) again no city water or sewage available. The water was wonderful, it was explained to me it that the water was from an aquifer whose source was thousands of miles away.
manwonder wrote:Drinking water/as well as the sad state of drainage systems here is a huge problem, even though our 'trusted' local supplier also supplies his filtered ground water to many major local hotel chains...I will always reboil part of whatever I get in those refilled blue 5 gallon bottles (yes always cleaned by ourselves prior refill) and only then consume it.
My partner/kids have had no issue thus far with the unboiled stuff but I'd rather be safe than sorry.
Local beer & Coke are stocked up for emergencies.
A local filtering station here was caught trying to substitute store bought bottled water for the water samples taken by the local inspector.
They had not done any maintenance to their filtration system for about five years.
We just had a new well drilled and the water has no odor and is crystal clear. We are sitting on a dead end road near a ridge with the closest neighbor being about two blocks away, then again that distance to the next one.
We are hoping that the water tests well and we can use it for drinking after filtering for sediment and boiling.
E.g : We wash the plates in the sink & guess where that wash water goes?
Yup it goes through the pipes & out onto the open ground which is about 1ft fm my perimetered fence...everybody else here has the same system.
b) The wash water fm the toilet too goes conviniently through those same linked common pipes.
c) Last week we had a very heavy downpour for 2 days straight...that same 1ft away spot outside my fence flooded & flowed into the neighbours house (who had no land fill nor fence)...like every other neighbours place...I knew this was going to be a problem so I built one of the largest perimeter fences 5ft hollow block with 3ft cyclone wire on top which goes all around on top of my massive land fill *my (ahem : not officially mine but my partners) 500m2 plot of land.
The public water that comes to our taps that we get from the local public utilities comes with a shameful pressure (we get about 4m3-6m3/month) & we pay for 10m3 like thats the minimum charge.
So lets not talk about water here...its like comparing generic cola with classic coke :
Walter: So, it's grade-school T-ball versus the New York Yankees. Yours is just some tepid, off-brand, generic cola. What I'm making is Classic Coke.

mugtech wrote:In Santa, Ilocos Sur, we have electric pumped well water, no problems.
Well (pardon the pun) done, nice to hear some well water is safe.
Cheers, Steve.
Our water here is hard so more soap for showers and detergent for washing machine and dishes, a far cry from our rain water tanks in Australia with soft water,,,,,,,,, we didn't drink that either, bird, tree frog and fruit bat droppings etc also gave low Ecoli levels and also purchased drinking water in Australia. We lived in a condo Manila for a year and always purchased our drinking water as the tap water stunk of chlorine one week and dirty water the next.
Any way what we have here we deal with unless we spend big bucks on a needless treatment plant that will require a lot of maintenance. Best to go with what the locals do.
OMO.
Cheers, Steve.
Cheers, Steve.
mugtech wrote:In Santa, Ilocos Sur, we have electric pumped well water, no problems.
We hoping for the same from our new deep well. As soon as we complete the tests, with the bacteria test taking about 48 hours.
One of our neighbors was here during the drilling and when it finally ran clear, he and the workers were drinking it. That was about a week ago. No reported illnesses yet.
TeeJay4103 wrote:One of our neighbors was here during the drilling and when it finally ran clear, he and the workers were drinking it. That was about a week ago. No reported illnesses yet.
Don't compare yourself to the locals. Their DNA over 20 generations gives them immunity in what they call water.
Your DNA is accustom to western standards. When it comes to water the two worlds collide.
Chalk up one for the third world.
Enzyte Bob wrote:TeeJay4103 wrote:One of our neighbors was here during the drilling and when it finally ran clear, he and the workers were drinking it. That was about a week ago. No reported illnesses yet.
Don't compare yourself to the locals. Their DNA over 20 generations gives them immunity in what they call water.
Your DNA is accustom to western standards. When it comes to water the two worlds collide.
Chalk up one for the third world.
There was no comparison made between myself and the locals. The reason for testing is to determine the quality and safety of the water for general use, not drinking. If the tests results are negative for bacterial contaminants, heavy metals, etc., only then would it be considered safe with continued periodic testing for safe consumption.
I doubt that DNA has much to do with immunity, if so, returning Filipinos who grew up drinking the water, left the country for years and returned, would be able to resume drinking it without ill effects. The DNA would not change according to geographical location.
Why would I test the water if I compared myself to locals? My Filipina wife will not drink it until it is considered safe for consumption.
Regards
scouser59 wrote:Why not use a filter system like pureit from unilever, works a treat on tap water, I change the filters once a year ,iv had for 8 years .
I watched a video about this unit and read a post from someone who said they purchased one from SM a few years ago for about 5k pesos. The video states that the germ kill kit (UV battery operated light) needs to be replaced when the indicator tells you the battery is failing. The poster stated that the cost was around 1,000 pesos.
My question is where do you buy it and the replacement UV battery operated germ kill kit. How much do you pay for the germ kill kit?
Unilever video:
https://youtu.be/I7vdUGBAPFc
Cheers, Steve.
I've seen in line electrically operated UV filters for your home at Lazada for around 2k pesos, though it would seem that just boiling the water would accomplish the same thing.
For our deep well, we installed a particulate filter on the incoming water line. It was inexpensive and the replacement filter is washable and cheap at the Wilcon near out home.
it cost around 50 usd , replacement filter kit for 3000 litre around 40 usd , lasts us around 1 year.
No hauling around plastic containers ,fine for us
Check online .
Check online
scouser59 wrote:We use the pureit classic , no uv , no power ,gravity only, 1 cloth filter and 2 activated charcoal filters ,dirty water in the top clean out the tap ,simple .
it cost around 50 usd , replacement filter kit for 3000 litre around 40 usd , lasts us around 1 year.
No hauling around plastic containers ,fine for us
Check online .
Check online
In the states I used the "Pur" filter multi stage system, it hooked up to the kitchen faucet with a switch to by pass the filter. After about a year, it started leaking. I sent an email to "Pur" complaining and they replacement it just on the strength of my email.
The internal replaceable filter was rated for 3,000 gallons. After 3,000 gallons the filters weight was noticeable heaver. I see that Lazada sells the internal filter but not the dispenser, how dumb.
I liked it for my coffee, but my wife preferred to drink her Desani or Aquafina bought at Sam's Club.
I don't drink water except for my pills, otherwise I just drink juice.
I still have my reservations.
Omo
Who monitors the water that goes into a bottle of Coke? Mind you all the sugar in it would kill most bugs.
OMO.
Cheers, Steve.
We used to filter tap water for drinking with our Pure-It filter by Unilever. We bought it at True Value hardware store here in the Philippines. The container looks a bit like a water dispenser with a modern black and white design. (Looked nice in my kitchen.) You fill the top with water, which passes through a replaceable filter, and out comes clean water through a spigot.
It worked well for years. Then it broke. The side cracked and leaked.
The issue I have with that filter is that after you just replaced the filter cartridge, you will need to pass the water through the filter several times until the chlorine smell disappears. Sometimes, it takes about 10-15 pitchers to clear the smell. But after that, water comes out really clean.
There's an indicator which tells you if when you need to replace the filter. A price for filter cartridge replacement was, around 2 years ago, was around PhP1,000 and lasts for at least 3 months for us (5-6 people). The filters can be hard to find, so we keep 2 backups. We bought ours at Automatic Center.
We also have a small Brita filter pitcher for emergencies, like for lockdowns where there might be restrictions on deliveries. But we have not yet had the need to use it. The refilling station continued delivering water during ECQ.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_sterilizing_fluid
At the end of the day like most, showering, brushing teeth etc with our well water has never seen any illness or side effects, we got used to the water? Immune? Doubt it as the right bugs and balances were already in our systems from Oz. because of the tank water there. A little E coli here or there is fine but I would never drink a glass of water from our well as I won't tempt fate.
Our water purchases @ 20 pesos x 3 per week over a year is negligible and the interaction at our local refill station gives friendships and knowledge from the other locals that frequent that establishment, mingling with the locals etc.
To the OP, the drinking water is fine as long as you buy it or you have a cast iron gut.
OMO.
Cheers, Steve.
So drinking water is safe so long as it is sourced from a reputable refillling stations. 👍
Buy your own containers @ 160 pesos each and then you are in control of making sure they are sanitised regularly, I think I mentioned that I sent 2 bottles of Milton in a balakbayan box but chlorine or bleach works just as well. Showering and cleaning teeth with our well water has no ill effects even with evidence of E coli and high mineral content.
So back to your OP yes we trust "our" tap water for showers, dish washing, clothes washing, teeth cleaning (don't swallow) and watering the veggie garden.
Wish you well with your choices.
Cheers, Steve.
Jackson4 wrote:Do you trust tap water where you live?
Well water? Delivered 5 gallon filtered or purified water? Any GI issues from drinking the water? Back in the 90's, we would drink beer instead of water when we go the China or S. Korea. Bottled water in Saudi. We trust the water in other developed countries.
philippines is not monolith
water different in different places
one thing is tap water never good idea (same anywhere in the world with few exceptions)
local bottle water: be sure you trust them or else you may just get tap
make well for your self that may be best thing if it can be done where you are
Jilly Ruby Jane wrote:I installed a whole house water filter for my family. I bought the iSpring WGB21B a few months ago, but just installed this. My word. I wish I had done this sooner. I'm using well water and only have a basic spin-down filter. After installation, the water is very smooth and free of grit.
Hi Jilly, welcome firstly to the forum, hope you enjoy.
We have well water, tested in the labs 2 years ago, high in mineral content which we well knew, vinegar is the cure for cleaning and at times hydrochloric acid in the toilet bowls. E.coli and coliform levels were well over the acceptable limits/standards both here and western countries. Did you look at nasty bacterias? Cast iron guts as another member mentioned. A filtration system to remove sediments and bacteria where we are was in order of PHP 150K + then the daily maintenance for a room full of filters (backwashing) pumps, UV light monitoring/replacement,,,,,, nope. The trusted water supplier for drinking water @ 20 pesos for 5 gallons, he/they do all the work, the well is fine for showers, washing and even cleaning teeth,,,,,,,,,, drink it no. spit it out and to date the little bacteria in the water has caused no problems. OMO but all your filtration system that you installed does is remove heavy particles, down to 5 microns? 1 micron? .5 micron? To remove pathogens you need at least a 5 micron filter system then radiate with UV. .5 micron with silver no UV sterilisation,,,,, expensive,,,,, go our local supplier that does it all for us. Australia, My home country, the town water is heavily chlorinated to kill these bacteria and save their behinds from being sued, nasty smelly tap water in Oz.
OMO.
Cheers, Steve.
Enzyte Bob wrote:Don't compare yourself to the locals. Their DNA over 20 generations gives them immunity in what they call water..
My business partner got ill by drinking water he thought was ok. But he got ill only one and a halffday, while I suppouse foreigners would have gpt ill a month 
Many "well builders" in SE Asia dont know how tto build wells!!!
I have written the funny/crazy elsewhere how a big construction company first built it leting in water close to surface so it was even very muddy. When the buyer complained, it was channged soit doidnt let any water in at all 

During the customer tried - and failed . to make the conctruction boss understamnd , a clever worker took a drill machine and made holes where they were suppoused to be...
At Bohol it was a well built well for a foreiner but the builders screwed up very much when they tried to make it deeper, but luckilythe foreigner saw it in time to get it solved after his insructions.
I had a well drilled on the property but it's only 60 ft. deep. We have a proper septic system by Philippine standards and the overflow is piped to the nearest river. We only have one neighbor and I had the well drilled about 40 meters from their system. I'll have the water tested but would still like a RO filter with a UV purifier just for drinking water. Biliran is known for sweet water, whatever that means.
[img][img]
[/img][/img]Living here? We buy our drinking water from the local refilling station, it's 20 pesos for 5 gallons or 25 pesos if they deliver. While it's not on tap? Welcome to a/an in theory third world country.
Facts for here. We are absolute beachfront and we have a deep well at the back of the titled lot, some 110/120 from the high tide mark, about 28/30 ft deep, (below ocean level) we had the data/samples chemically analysed and tested some 2 or 3 years ago with a reputable lab, the same lab that tests the sold drinking water here to the locals in 5 gallon containers. Lab tests: E coli not too bad, Colforms while high still acceptable by WHO standards. Lime and calcium content is high as is shown in toilet bowls/ showers,/S/S sinks and simply requires vinegar for S/S or as I'm an old plumber straight hydrochloric acid for china. Salinity around 500 parts million, a little under the 600 recommended parts per million but we don't drink it. Shower, teeth, washing the clothes and washing the car/bikes, watering the veggie garden we have never been sick etc.
Time will tell once you settle in and look at saving dollars. I will/do query?
Piping your septic overflow to the nearest river?????? Go throw all your plastic bags and waste motor oil in there as well. What is your builder and municipal hall thinking? What are you thinking? Sorry to be a hard ar@e but.
While I appreciate your informative posts I see the ball has been dropped for our children and grand children. Pumping/pushing your shit into a river that people fish in, ends up in our oceans where even more people fish simply because the builder or your local municipal are too stupid to see the writing on the wall..... Not your fault Moon Dog but perhaps hold a few to account?
OMO.
Cheers, Steve.
Though I am a pretty good swimmer I still don't swim at our local sea beach even though my house sits hardly 50mtrs away (I have a dirty water phobia)...though my partner & kids still do.
Sadly I still only take full body dips in our 5m3 rain water collection trough.
Okieboy wrote:We have been on a Barangy water well for years, no way you can drink it, bottle water only, but we are getting a new water source, from a river in the mountains,
I would NOT drink water from a muntain river (without cleaning first.)
Some weeks ago my business partner looked at a propery for sale some more away from the others. It was much to look at waking and they got out of water. They thought it was safe to drink from a moountain/hill creek there, but it wasnt. He got soon serioous ill with diareha.
But when foreigners get knocked out long time, then Filipinos recover in a day
(with meds he had at home.)
But I would drink from a correct made rural well (many are not, not tight enough down)
and different if it would be a SPRING and COVERED and no toilets, pigfarms or such "upstreams" They have good chanse to be clean.
bigpearl wrote:Piping your septic overflow to the nearest river?????? Go throw all your plastic bags and waste motor oil in there as well. What is your builder and municipal hall thinking? What are you thinking? Sorry to be a hard ar@e but..
Yes. I were going to say something similar.
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