Water Filtration in Commack, NY
Whole-Home Water Filtration for Commack
Commack is one of central Suffolk’s largest and most family-oriented communities — and it sits squarely in the overlap zone between two of Long Island’s most significant groundwater contamination corridors. PFAS migrating east from Bethpage and 1,4-dioxane from western Suffolk industrial sources both reach the aquifer beneath Commack. Testing your specific water is the only way to know what’s actually there.
Central Suffolk County
Serving Commack and the Surrounding Communities
Commack is a hamlet in the Town of Smithtown, drawing its municipal water supply from the Suffolk County Water Authority. The SCWA operates wells tapping the Magothy aquifer throughout central Suffolk — the same aquifer formation where both PFAS and 1,4-dioxane contamination have been confirmed by state and federal monitoring.
The SCWA tests and treats its supply to meet regulatory standards, but the contaminant landscape in central Suffolk is evolving rapidly as new plume data emerges. A home water test at your specific address gives you the most current and relevant picture of what’s reaching your tap.
Our Commack Service Area Includes:
- Commack (all sections)
- Kings Park & Nesconset
- Hauppauge & Elwood
- East Northport & Melville
- Surrounding central Suffolk communities
Schedule a Commack Appointment
384 Moffitt Blvd, Islip, NY 11751
1-631-991-3995- Mon – Fri: 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
- Saturday: 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
- Sunday: Closed
Same-day or next-business-day appointments available
Two Separate Contamination Plumes Reach Commack’s Groundwater
Commack sits at the convergence of two of Long Island’s most documented groundwater contamination zones. The Bethpage PFAS plume — originating from former Grumman Aerospace operations in Nassau County — has been confirmed migrating eastward into central Suffolk, reaching aquifer zones that supply Commack and neighboring communities. Separately, 1,4-dioxane from western Suffolk industrial sources has been confirmed in the central Suffolk aquifer corridor. These are two distinct contaminants, each requiring different treatment media, and neither has any taste or odor. Standard carbon block filters address neither. A free in-home water test tells you which contaminants are present in your supply today — and at what concentrations.
Test My Water — FreeUnderstanding Your Risk
Commack’s Position in the Central Suffolk Contamination Corridor
Geography matters in groundwater contamination. Commack’s location places it in the path of contamination from two separate directions.
Threat 1 — From the West
PFAS from the Bethpage Plume
The Bethpage PFAS contamination plume originated from Grumman Aerospace operations in Nassau County. It has been migrating eastward through the aquifer for decades and has now been documented in central Suffolk groundwater. PFAS compounds have been linked to cancer, thyroid disruption, and immune system effects. The EPA’s 2024 rule enforces limits as low as 4 parts per trillion — among the strictest contaminant limits in federal history.
Threat 2 — From the Southwest
1,4-Dioxane from Industrial Sources
1,4-Dioxane from western Suffolk industrial and manufacturing operations has been confirmed in the central Suffolk aquifer. Unlike PFAS, 1,4-dioxane is completely water-soluble, does not adsorb onto carbon media, and travels freely through groundwater systems. New York State’s 1 part per billion limit is one of the strictest in the nation. It requires different treatment technology than PFAS — which is why testing for both before choosing any system is essential.
PFAS and 1,4-dioxane require different filtration media. A system optimized for PFAS may not address 1,4-dioxane effectively, and vice versa. Knowing exactly which contaminants are present — and at what concentrations — allows us to configure the right system for your specific water, rather than applying a generic solution that may leave gaps. That’s why we always test before we recommend anything.
Know Your Water
Water Quality Issues Affecting Commack Homes
Central Suffolk’s industrial history, dense suburban development, and aging cesspool infrastructure converge in Commack’s groundwater supply.
PFAS — Migrating from the Bethpage Corridor
The Bethpage PFAS plume began as a Nassau County issue, but continued migration has brought confirmed PFAS concentrations into the central Suffolk aquifer zones that supply Commack. PFAS — per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — are often called “forever chemicals” because they accumulate in the body and do not break down in the environment. Long-term exposure has been associated with cancer, thyroid disease, elevated cholesterol, and weakened immune response. Children are disproportionately affected relative to body weight. The EPA’s 2024 maximum contaminant levels for individual PFAS compounds are as low as 4 parts per trillion.
1,4-Dioxane — Confirmed in the Central Suffolk Zone
State testing has confirmed 1,4-dioxane in the aquifer beneath central Suffolk County, including zones that supply Commack’s water districts. This industrial solvent travels freely through water and soil, does not degrade naturally, and is classified by the EPA as a likely human carcinogen. Its defining characteristic for water treatment purposes is that it does not adsorb onto activated carbon — meaning pitcher filters, refrigerator filters, and most basic whole-house carbon systems have no effect on it whatsoever. New York State’s 1 ppb regulatory limit is among the most protective in the country.
Nitrogen & Nitrates from Cesspool Density
Commack and the surrounding central Suffolk area developed rapidly in the postwar decades, with residential density built on cesspool infrastructure that was never designed for long-term use at this scale. An estimated 360,000 aging cesspools across Suffolk County discharge nitrogen-rich wastewater into the soil above the drinking water aquifer. This contributes elevated nitrate concentrations to Commack’s municipal supply wells. Nitrates pose a documented health risk to infants under six months, for whom high-nitrate water can cause a dangerous condition affecting blood oxygen levels, and to pregnant women.
Chlorine & Disinfection Byproducts
Commack’s municipal supply is treated with chlorine to meet bacterial safety standards during distribution through the SCWA network. The familiar chemical taste and odor many residents notice is residual chlorine that has persisted to the tap. More significantly, chlorine reacts with naturally occurring organic compounds in the water to form trihalomethanes (THMs) and haloacetic acids — disinfection byproducts the EPA classifies as probable human carcinogens with long-term, chronic exposure. A whole-home filtration system eliminates chlorine and its byproducts at the main entry point, so no fixture in your home receives untreated water.
Why pHountain
Why Commack Families Choose pHountain
When two separate contamination threats are documented in your community’s water supply, you need a company that tests precisely and recommends honestly — not one that applies a one-size-fits-all solution.
Dual-Contaminant Testing
Our assessment screens for both PFAS and 1,4-dioxane — the two primary threats in the Commack area — alongside the full panel of nitrates, chlorine byproducts, hardness, iron, and TDS. One visit, one comprehensive picture.
Right System for Your Results
PFAS and 1,4-dioxane require different filtration approaches. We configure every system based on what your specific test results show, not on a regional assumption that both contaminants are always present at the same level.
10-Year System Guarantee
Every system we install in Commack carries a 10-year performance guarantee. That level of backing reflects genuine confidence in what we install — and in the technicians who install it.
Built for Families
Commack is one of Long Island’s most family-centered communities. Children are more vulnerable to the contaminants in your water than adults. pHountain was founded specifically to protect families from exactly this kind of documented contamination.
Our Systems
Filtration Systems for Every Commack Home
From a compact split-level to a large Commack colonial — sized after your water test, configured for your specific contaminant profile.
PureFlow Plus
Homes 500 – 2,000 sq ft
- 1,000,000+ gallon capacity
- Family of 5 or fewer
- 10-year guarantee
- Maintenance-free
Hydramax Pro
Homes 1,500 – 4,000 sq ft
- 1,500,000+ gallon capacity
- Family of 4 or more
- 10-year guarantee
- Maintenance-free
Grand Estate
Homes 3,000 – 7,000+ sq ft
- 2,000,000+ gallon capacity
- Family of 5 or more
- 10-year guarantee
- Maintenance-free
Free Assessment
Free In-Home Water Test for Commack Homeowners
Neither PFAS nor 1,4-dioxane has a taste, smell, or visible sign. Nitrates look like clean water. For Commack families dealing with two documented contamination corridors, knowing your specific levels is not optional — it’s the foundation of every decision that follows.
Your free water test includes:
- PFAS screening for the central Suffolk / Bethpage plume corridor
- 1,4-dioxane indicators for the western Suffolk contamination zone
- Nitrate levels relevant to Commack’s cesspool density
- Chlorine, THMs, and disinfection byproduct indicators
- Hardness, pH, iron, and total dissolved solids
- Plain-language explanation of every result, in your home, before we leave
A recommendation only comes after the results — never before.
Schedule Your Free Commack Water Test
We respond within one business day — often same day.
Common Questions
Water Filtration FAQs for Commack Homeowners
Is PFAS from the Bethpage plume actually reaching Commack?
State and federal monitoring has confirmed that the Bethpage PFAS plume is not stationary — it continues migrating eastward through the Long Island aquifer system. While the plume originated in Nassau County, confirmed PFAS concentrations have been documented in central Suffolk groundwater, including aquifer zones supplying Commack and the surrounding communities. The Suffolk County Water Authority has been required to upgrade treatment at affected supply wells in this region. The exact concentration at your specific address can only be determined by an in-home water test.
What is 1,4-dioxane and why does it matter for Commack?
1,4-Dioxane is a synthetic industrial solvent and manufacturing byproduct that was widely used in consumer products and industrial processes for decades. The EPA classifies it as a likely human carcinogen. It has been confirmed in the central Suffolk aquifer that supplies Commack’s water districts. The critical issue for homeowners is that 1,4-dioxane does not adsorb onto activated carbon, which is the filtration medium used in pitcher filters, refrigerator filters, and most point-of-use systems. Standard carbon filtration has no meaningful effect on 1,4-dioxane levels. Addressing it requires specific advanced media. New York State’s 1 part per billion limit is one of the strictest regulatory thresholds in the country.
Is Commack tap water safe for my children?
Commack’s municipal water meets current regulatory standards. However, children are more biologically vulnerable than adults to PFAS, 1,4-dioxane, nitrates, and disinfection byproducts — all of which are documented in Suffolk County water supplies. Regulatory thresholds are set for adult risk levels and may not reflect the lower exposure thresholds that health researchers now associate with developmental effects in children. Many Commack families with young children choose whole-home filtration specifically to eliminate these contaminants before they can ask the question again in ten years. A water test provides the specific numbers you need to make that decision for your family.
Does pHountain serve Kings Park, Hauppauge, and the surrounding area?
Yes. Our service area covers all of central Suffolk County including Commack, Kings Park, Nesconset, Hauppauge, Elwood, East Northport, and Melville. These communities share similar water quality profiles given their proximity to the same aquifer zones and their position along the same contamination corridors. Call us at 1-631-991-3995 or submit the form on this page to schedule your appointment.
Do I need different filtration for PFAS and 1,4-dioxane, or does one system handle both?
This is exactly why testing before purchasing any system matters. PFAS and 1,4-dioxane respond to different filtration media. Some advanced whole-home systems are configured to address both — but only if they include the appropriate combination of media. A system designed primarily for PFAS may not adequately reduce 1,4-dioxane, and vice versa. After testing your water, pHountain’s specialists configure a system specifically matched to the contaminants present in your home’s supply at their actual concentrations — not a generic system that assumes both are always present in equal measure.
From the Community
What Commack Residents Are Saying
“Between the Bethpage news and then reading about 1,4-dioxane, I wasn’t sure which problem we had or how bad it was. pHountain tested for both. The PFAS was the bigger concern at our address. They configured the right system for that specific result and haven’t tried to upsell us on anything since. Exactly the approach I was hoping for.”
“We have three kids in the Commack schools and I stopped drinking tap water myself years ago. I finally had it tested properly. The results motivated us to act. Our whole-home system has been running for 14 months and the difference in daily life is real — from cooking to showering to just not buying cases of water anymore.”
“Professional from the first call to the end of installation. Our water had a noticeable chlorine smell that I’d just accepted as normal. After the pHountain system, it’s completely gone — and the test results gave us documentation showing what was actually in our water before and after. That level of transparency built a lot of trust.”
Your Next Step
Two Contamination Threats. One Free Test. One Honest Answer.
You can’t taste, smell, or see PFAS or 1,4-dioxane. A free in-home water test from pHountain gives you the specific numbers for your Commack home — no assumptions, no pressure, no obligation.