Sulfur / Rotten Egg Smell in Water

Morning shower with hot water arriving slowly.

This hub covers sulfur or “rotten egg” odors in water. The smell may be only on hot water, only on cold water, strongest in the shower, or noticeable only at certain fixtures.

These odors often start after a water heater change, an outage, winterization, filter work, or plumbing repairs. Sometimes the smell is strongest on the first draw and improves after flushing.

Use the groups below to match the hot/cold pattern and what changed recently, then open the closest article title.

Related category: Water Contamination, Taste & Odor

Hot-only vs cold-only sulfur smells

Clues based on whether the smell is tied to hot water or cold water.

  • Rotten egg smell in hot water

    Smells limited to hot taps usually point to issues inside the water heater such as sulfate-reducing bacteria or reactions with anode rods; treatment often focuses on the heater itself.

  • Sulfur smell only in cold water

    Cold-water odors suggest a source in the supply, storage, or a cold-water treatment device rather than the heater.

  • Odor that worsens when heater runs

    If the smell intensifies while the heater is operating, heat-driven reactions or bacteria in the tank are likely contributors.

After changes or events

Smell that begins after heater work, outages, repairs, winterization, or installs.

Where you notice it most

When the smell is strongest at a specific fixture or use.

  • Sulfur odor when running shower

    Showers can concentrate odors through warm water and aeration; localized issues often relate to nearby piping or the water heater.

  • Smell only in upstairs bathroom

    Floor-by-floor differences suggest localized piping, branch lines, or water use patterns rather than the main supply.

  • Smell only in kitchen sink

    Kitchen fixtures can pick up odors from sink drains, garbage disposals, or undersink plumbing as well as the incoming water.

  • Sulfur odor in laundry water

    Laundry odor often results from standing water in machines or supply lines, and it may differ between hot and cold cycles.

First-draw and flushing behavior

How the smell behaves after sitting and after flushing lines.

  • Odor only in first water draw

    Smells that appear on the first draw and fade after running taps usually point to stagnation in short sections of piping or fixtures.

  • Smell disappears after flushing system

    If flushing clears the odor, the issue may be temporary buildup or isolated contamination rather than persistent source contamination.

Recurring patterns

Smell that returns on a repeating schedule.

  • Smell returns every few weeks

    Periodic recurrence can indicate seasonal water changes, intermittent bacterial growth, or regeneration cycles in treatment equipment.

Well-water sudden onset

When well water develops a sulfur smell suddenly.

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