What the VA Requires for Well Water Testing (NC Real Estate Guide)
Why the VA Requires Testing
For homes on private wells, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs requires evidence that the water is safe and sanitary before approving a loan. If the documentation isn’t there—or doesn’t hold up—your file can stall fast.
Minimum Water Quality Requirements (Typical)
While requirements can vary by lender/underwriter, VA files commonly expect a basic safety panel:
Total Coliform – indicator of possible contamination
E. coli – direct health risk indicator
Nitrates / Nitrites – often tied to septic or agricultural sources
Lead – frequently required for VA transactions
Results must be clear, documented, and defensible.
Who Can Collect the Sample
The VA expects independent, third-party sampling—not the homeowner or an interested party. In practice, this means:
Neutral provider (no financial interest in the sale outcome)
Proper collection procedures
Chain of Custody (COC) documenting handling from site to lab
If the sampling isn’t credible, the results can be rejected.
Where the Sample Should Be Taken
Standard expectation is to collect from an interior faucet on the home’s potable water system (representing water as it’s used).
If that’s not possible (vacant, winterized, no interior access), a documented exception may allow exterior collection—with clear notes explaining why.
Laboratory Requirements
Analysis must be performed by a certified, accredited laboratory. Lenders are looking for:
Official lab report (not DIY results)
Identified parameters and methods
Dates, times, and sample IDs matching the COC
No shortcuts here—this is what underwriting relies on.
Water Supply & System Expectations
Beyond lab results, VA underwriters often look for basic functionality:
Adequate flow rate (commonly referenced 3–5 GPM)
Working pressure (typically around 40–60 PSI)
System appears operational at time of inspection
These are context indicators, not guarantees—but they matter to the file.
If the Water Test Fails
Don’t panic—this happens and is usually fixable.
Typical path:
Identify the failing parameter (often bacteria)
Perform well disinfection
Flush the system
Re-test with proper documentation
A passing re-test is generally required before approval.
Documentation the VA File Should Include
To avoid pushback, your file should have:
Certified lab report
Chain of custody (COC)
Sampling notes (location, method, conditions)
Clear pass/fail interpretation
Any corrective action documentation (if applicable)
If it’s missing or unclear, expect delays.
Common Mistakes That Delay VA Closings
Testing scheduled too late
Non-independent or improper sampling
Missing COC
Wrong test panel (missing lead when required)
Failed test with no corrective plan
All avoidable—and all costly in time.
Best Way to Keep the Deal Moving
Schedule testing immediately after contract
Confirm lender-specific requirements up front
Use a provider who understands VA timelines
Allow time for a possible re-test
Bottom Line
VA loans don’t allow guesswork. With private wells, it comes down to proper sampling, certified lab results, and clean documentation. Do it right the first time, and your closing stays on track.

