Chlorine or Chemical Taste and Odor

A clear glass of tap water on a kitchen counter

This page covers water that tastes or smells chemical, bleach-like, or “pooly” — for example water that suddenly smells of chlorine after a boil, outage, or nearby work. These changes can be isolated to hot water, cold water, upstairs fixtures, or a single location like the kitchen or shower; they sometimes ease after running the tap for a minute.

Related subcategory: Water Contamination, Taste & Odor

City work, outages, and supply changes

Use these articles when the issue began after municipal work, a pressure event, or a service outage.

Hot-side, cold-side, and heater-related clues

These articles focus on whether the taste or odor appears only with hot water, only cold water, or after the water heater refills.

Where you notice it (shower, kitchen, dishes)

These pieces help narrow causes when the smell or taste is strongest at a particular fixture or activity.

Filter and smart-shutoff timing

If the taste or smell started after installing or servicing equipment, these articles focus on those scenarios.

Taste intensity and timing patterns

These articles help when the problem is defined by how strong it is, when it occurs, or whether it clears after running the tap.

  • Strong chlorine taste in tap water

    Summarizes likely sources when the chlorine flavor is obvious at multiple taps and steps to verify municipal vs. home causes.

  • Taste like pool water

    Compares pool-like sensations with common disinfectants and recommends simple checks to narrow the cause.

  • Taste worse in morning

    Explains why stagnant overnight water can concentrate tastes and how a short flush or maintenance step often helps.

  • Taste disappears after running tap

    Describes scenarios where a temporary taste is due to aged water in the lines and when flushing is an appropriate remedy.

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