Olympian Water Testing™
- On Site Laboratory Testing
- PWTA Well Water Testing for Real Estate Transactions
- DOH / DEP / EPA / NELAP Standards
- Residential & Commercial
- E. coli and Total Coliform
- Heterotrophic Plate Count
- Heavy Metals
- Chemicals
- Microplastics
- Iron
- Lead
- Copper
- PFAS / PFOS
- VOCs
- HAA5
- All Contaminants
Celebrating New Jersey's #1 Consumer Choice for 35 Consecutive Years
Olympian Water Testing delivers expert water testing and analysis, targeting contaminants like microplastics, PFAS, VOCs, heavy metals, E. coli, total coliform, Legionella, and more. As the trusted choice for on-site laboratory testing, we adhere to top DOH, DEP, EPA, and NELAP standards. Our dedicated Client Services Team is available around the clock, every day of the year, ensuring reliable support whenever you need it.
We Test in Full Compliance with The Private Well Water Testing Act for Real Estate Transactions
Wanaque Water Testing
Consulting & Lab Analysis
Well Testing • City / Municipal Water
✓ Well Testing ✓ City / Municipal Water
Mobile Laboratory
Sampling

Well Water
State-mandated Private Well Testing Act (PWTA) panels for home sales. We perform all required testing—including bacteria, arsenic, lead, VOCs, and nitrates—with fast turnaround and full compliance reporting.

Laboratory
Certified laboratory water testing services designed for professional, medical, and commercial applications. Full-spectrum analysis ensures precision, compliance, and scientifically valid results.

Potability
Precise potability analysis, verifying essential safety benchmarks—from coliforms to chemical residues—using laboratory-grade instrumentation to ensure water meets or exceeds national drinking standards.

Pools and Spas
Certified weekly and monthly testing for Spas, hotels and commercial pools. Focused on E. coli and total coliform detection, our lab ensures water safety compliance with NJ recreational bathing code requirements.

Lead and Copper
High-precision assays targeting lead and copper levels in water systems. Utilizing EPA-approved methodologies, data-driven reporting ensures regulatory compliance and safeguards public health.

Schools
Dedicated school water safety testing includes multi-point sampling and pathogen screening. Laboratory-level analysis ensures student and staff environments remain free from dangerous contaminants.

Bacteria
Advanced bacteriological screening checks for E. coli, coliforms, Legionella, and other pathogens. Laboratory-controlled procedures provide definitive results, enhancing health protection.

Microplastics
State‑of‑the‑art microplastic detection using spectrometry and filtration techniques. Identifies and quantifies microscopic particles, delivering laboratory-grade data on plastic contamination.
Why Choose Olympian Water Testing?
Choose Olympian Water Testing for expert, on-site analysis and trusted results that meet the highest regulatory standards for water safety.
Latest Technology
Accurate
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Trusted Partners
At Olympian Water Testing™, we’re dedicated to a cleaner, healthier planet, making a positive impact through every service we provide. Thank you for choosing us as your trusted sustainability partner.
History of Municipal and Well Water in Wanaque, New Jersey
Wanaque NJ water supply history begins with its early 18th-century settlement in Passaic County, where European families like the Ryersons and Vreelands relied on natural streams, springs, and the Wanaque River for water. Indigenous Lenni Lenape communities also used local waterways for sustenance. As the area developed, well water systems in Wanaque emerged as primary sources, drawing from glacial sand and gravel aquifers, according to records from the Wanaque Public Library local history.
Incorporated as a borough on February 23, 1918, from Pompton Township, Wanaque saw municipal water development coincide with regional needs. While the North Jersey District Water Supply Commission, formed in 1916, proposed the Wanaque Reservoir in 1911 to supply northeastern New Jersey, construction began in 1920 on the Raymond Dam. Completed in 1928 and dedicated in 1930, the 29.6-billion-gallon reservoir—fed by the Wanaque and Ramapo Rivers—serves municipalities like Newark and Paterson but not Wanaque itself, which maintained independent facilities, per the NJDWSC history and New Jersey State Archives.
Today, Wanaque’s municipal water comes from groundwater wells managed by the borough’s Water Department, serving 11,317 residents (2020 census) under New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection regulations. This well-based system ensures quality for the community, distinct from the reservoir’s regional role. For more on the borough’s founding, visit Wikipedia’s Wanaque page or the official Borough of Wanaque site. Current details are available at Jersey WaterCheck.
Passaic County: 07403, Clifton: 07011, Paterson: 07501, Bloomingdale: 07403, Haledon: 07508, Hawthorne: 07506, North Haledon: 07508, Pompton Lakes: 07442, Prospect Park: 07508, Ringwood: 07456, Totowa: 07512, Wanaque: 07465, Woodland Park: 07424, Little Falls Township: 07424, Wayne Township: 07470, West Milford Township: 07480