USWaterLevels
💧 Real-Time Quality Scores

US Water Quality Index

Our composite Water Quality Score combines temperature, reservoir levels, and flow rates to rate conditions for swimming, fishing, and recreation.

1,648
Active Stations
64.3°F
National Avg Temp
1,383
Ideal Temp (65–78°F)
0
≥85% Pool Level

How We Calculate Water Quality Score (0–100)

40 pts
🌡️ Temperature

Maximum points when water temp is near ideal 71.5°F (22°C) for most recreational activities.

30 pts
⛰️ Reservoir Level

Full points when reservoir is at or near full pool capacity. Low levels reduce score.

30 pts
🌊 Flow Rate

Moderate, stable flow (100–5,000 cfs) earns full points. Extreme highs or lows reduce score.

🟢 Excellent (80–100) 🟩 Good (60–79) 🟡 Fair (40–59) 🔴 Poor (0–39)
#21
45
score

Russell C Nr Cold Bay Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 47.1°F ⛰️ 27 ft 🌊 258 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#22
45
score

Atigun R Bl Galbraith Lk Nr Pump Station 4 Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 713 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#23
45
score

Bradley R Nr Tidewater Nr Homer Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 41.4°F 🌊 151 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#24
45
score

Willow C Nr Willow Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 995 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#25
45
score

Antler R Bl Antler Lk Nr Auke Bay Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 192 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#26
45
score

Kenai R At Soldotna Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 50.5°F 🌊 3,340 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#27
45
score

Unalakleet R Ab Chiroskey R Nr Unalakleet Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 45.5°F 🌊 2,350 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#28
45
score

Ship C Nr Anchorage Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 43.9°F 🌊 317 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#29
45
score

Matanuska R At Palmer Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 50.7°F ⛰️ 10 ft 🌊 4,940 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#30
45
score

Mf Bradley R Bl Nf Bradley R Nr Homer Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 115 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#31
45
score

Mendenhall R Nr Auke Bay Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 1,040 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#32
45
score

Fish C Nr Ketchikan Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 224 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#33
45
score

Salcha R Nr Salchaket Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 49.8°F 🌊 3,730 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#34
45
score

Chena R At Fairbanks Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 3,230 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#35
45
score

Lemon C Nr Juneau Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 39.7°F 🌊 241 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#36
45
score

Kenai R At Cooper Landing Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 41.7°F 🌊 1,480 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#37
45
score

Iliamna R Nr Pedro Bay Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 41.2°F 🌊 2,610 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#38
45
score

Goodpaster R Nr Big Delta Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌊 1,470 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#39
45
score

Greens C At Greens Creek Mine Nr Juneau Ak

Alaska · River
Fair
⛰️ 206 ft 🌊 115 cfs Updated: Jun 03
#40
45
score

L Susitna R Nr Palmer Ak

Alaska · Lake
Fair
🌡️ 38.8°F 🌊 486 cfs Updated: Jun 03
← Prev 1 2 3 4 Next →

Understanding the Water Quality Index

The US Water Quality Index is a composite score designed to give anglers, swimmers, boaters, and outdoor enthusiasts a quick, at-a-glance assessment of water body conditions. Unlike traditional water quality indices that focus on chemical pollutants (which require laboratory analysis), our index uses real-time USGS sensor data to reflect physical conditions relevant to recreation.

Temperature Component (40 points)

Water temperature is the most important factor for recreational fishing, swimming, and wildlife activity. The ideal range for most activities — comfortable for swimming, optimal for bass and walleye fishing — is approximately 65–78°F (18–26°C). Our scoring peaks at 71.5°F and decreases proportionally as temperature moves away from this ideal.

Reservoir Level Component (30 points)

Reservoir levels (measured as a percentage of full pool) reflect drought conditions, drought recovery, flood risk, and overall ecosystem health. A reservoir at full pool (100%) scores maximum points. Severely depleted reservoirs — common during drought — score fewer points. This metric is particularly relevant in western states where water storage is critical.

Flow Rate Component (30 points)

River discharge (measured in cubic feet per second, cfs) indicates safe boating, wading, and kayaking conditions. Moderate, stable flow rates between 100–5,000 cfs are typically ideal for most recreation. Extremely high flows indicate flood risk, while extremely low flows suggest drought stress and limited habitat for fish.