Body & Soul2 mins ago
Can you drink bathroom tap water?
7 Answers
My mum used to always say to me that you shouldn't drink the water from the bathroom as it's not the same water you get from the kitchen tap. Is this correct and is it still the case for new houses?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by helpme!. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It depends whether your bathroom is tank fed or whether the cold water comes direct from the mains, if it is tank fed strictly speaking you shouldn't drink it because it has been sat for a time in your cold water tank in the loft.
If it's an old house and the tank has no lid, theoretically it could have a dead pigeon in it
Age of house makes no difference because some builders still install tank fed bathrooms, I believe Tay Homes does (although dont quote me on that)
If it's an old house and the tank has no lid, theoretically it could have a dead pigeon in it
Age of house makes no difference because some builders still install tank fed bathrooms, I believe Tay Homes does (although dont quote me on that)
-- answer removed --
Agreed, except on some older houses all the cold water comes from the mains wherease nearly all newer houses have a cold water storage tank. If the water tank abides by water regulations it should be perfectly OK to drink from, but some do not. The idea is that if you have a break in water supply you still have a reserve of water to operate the toilet etc. You can tell by water pressure: mains water will be mains pressure wherease water from a storage tank depends on the pressure drop between tank and tap (very much less than mains pressure and similar to hot water pressure).
Fairly easy way to tell if it's tank fed.
Put your finger or thumb over the end of the tap and see if you can stop the flow, if you can then there's a good chance it's tank fed. If not, then it's probably mains fed, and should be ok to drink.
If you're still unsure, stick your head through the loft hatch and see if you can see the water tank, if there is then don't drink it. (Besides which, who want's to?)
Put your finger or thumb over the end of the tap and see if you can stop the flow, if you can then there's a good chance it's tank fed. If not, then it's probably mains fed, and should be ok to drink.
If you're still unsure, stick your head through the loft hatch and see if you can see the water tank, if there is then don't drink it. (Besides which, who want's to?)