Sulfur Smell
That rotten egg smell is one of the most unpleasant water problems there is — and one of the most common in northeast Iowa well water. Here’s what causes it and how to eliminate it.
What Causes That Rotten Egg Smell?
The culprit is hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) — a colorless gas that dissolves into groundwater. It forms when naturally occurring sulfur-reducing bacteria in the ground break down organic matter, or when sulfur compounds in rock formations react with water underground.
Hydrogen sulfide is detectable by smell at incredibly low concentrations — as little as 0.5 parts per billion. That means even trace amounts produce a strong, unpleasant odor.
It’s especially common in private well water across northeast Iowa, where certain geological formations create ideal conditions for sulfur formation. Hot water often smells worse than cold because heat drives the gas out of solution faster.
Naturally occurring bacteria in soil and groundwater that produce H₂S as a byproduct of their metabolic process. Present in many Iowa aquifers.
Certain rock types — particularly shale and limestone common in northeast Iowa — contain sulfur compounds that release H₂S as water passes through them.
The magnesium anode rod in your water heater can react with sulfates in water, producing H₂S that makes your hot water smell worse than cold. A simple anode swap often helps.
There’s No Escaping It
Sulfur smell doesn’t stay in one place. It follows your water everywhere — and fills every room it reaches.
The Shower
Steam carries the gas into the air, filling the bathroom with the smell. Hot water is almost always worse than cold.
The Kitchen
Drinking water, cooking water, coffee, ice — anything made with tap water carries the taste and smell into your food.
The Laundry
Clothes washed in sulfur water can come out smelling worse than they went in, especially when dried in warm air.
The Whole House
When sulfur is present throughout the water supply, the smell can permeate the air in every room — especially on warm or humid days.
Corrosion & Other Effects
Hydrogen sulfide isn’t just unpleasant to smell. At higher concentrations, it’s also mildly corrosive — capable of darkening silverware, tarnishing copper and brass fixtures, and accelerating corrosion in plumbing and appliances.
Sulfur water can also promote the growth of sulfur bacteria — a slimy, dark-colored biofilm that builds up on fixture surfaces and inside pipes, compounding both the odor problem and the corrosion.
At the levels typically found in residential wells, hydrogen sulfide is not considered a direct health hazard. But the quality-of-life impact is significant — and it’s completely fixable.
Sulfide compounds cause tarnishing and darkening of silver, copper, and brass surfaces.
Mild corrosion accelerates wear on pipes, valves, and internal appliance components.
Sulfur bacteria create a black or dark brown slime in pipes and on surfaces that worsens over time.
How We Eliminate Sulfur Smell
The right treatment depends on the concentration and source of the hydrogen sulfide. A water test pinpoints the problem so we can match the right solution.
Air Induction Filtration
The Evolve EVFE and EVS use air to oxidize hydrogen sulfide into sulfur particles, then filter them out. No chemicals, no ongoing additives — just clean, odor-free water throughout your home.
View Filters →Backwashing Carbon Filter
For lower concentrations of hydrogen sulfide, an activated carbon backwashing filter adsorbs the gas and eliminates the odor. Works well when combined with a softener for hard water.
View Filters →Start with a Water Test
Sulfur problems vary widely in concentration and source. A free in-home water test identifies exactly what you’re dealing with so we can recommend the most effective and cost-efficient treatment.
Schedule Testing →Ready to Breathe Easy?
You shouldn’t have to hold your breath in your own shower. A free water test will tell us exactly what’s causing the smell and give you a clear path to fixing it. No cost, no obligation.
