The moment you notice brown or discolored water, it’s important to pause before reacting. Most situations are manageable, but a few smart first steps help prevent unnecessary risk or damage.
Do:
Stay calm and observe before taking action
Check multiple fixtures to confirm the scope
Run cold water only for short periods to see if the color clears
Use white sinks, tubs, or buckets to clearly see water color
Don’t:
Don’t immediately assume contamination or danger
Don’t use hot water to flush initially (this can worsen sediment release)
Don’t wash laundry or dishes until clarity improves
Don’t ignore persistent or worsening discoloration
If brown water clears quickly after a brief cold-water flush, it was likely temporary sediment. If it does not clear, further steps are needed—but there is still no need to panic.
The goal in the first moments is information, not action.
This is one of the most common and important questions.
Drinking and cooking:
If water is visibly brown, cloudy, or rusty, it’s best not to drink or cook with it until it runs clear. Discoloration usually comes from rust or sediment, which is not ideal to ingest—even if not immediately dangerous.
Bathing and showering:
Brief skin contact is generally less concerning than ingestion, but avoid bathing infants or pregnant individuals in visibly discolored water if possible. Brown water can stain skin, tubs, and fabrics.
Brushing teeth:
Wait until water clears or use bottled or filtered water temporarily.
Once water returns to normal clarity and odor, it’s usually safe to resume normal use.
If brown water appears temporary, safe flushing can help clear it.
Safe flushing steps:
Use cold water only
Start with the lowest-level faucet (often a tub or utility sink)
Run water for 60–90 seconds
Observe color changes
Stop once water runs clear
If water does not clear:
Do not keep flushing endlessly
Stop and reassess
Check with neighbors
Contact building management
For hot water issues, flushing the water heater may be required—but this should only be done by a professional or building maintenance.
Temporary solutions while waiting:
Use bottled water for drinking and cooking
Use cold-only water for cleaning surfaces
Delay laundry and dishwashing
You should contact building management or a landlord when:
Brown water affects multiple fixtures
Neighbors report the same issue
Discoloration lasts more than 24–48 hours
The problem returns frequently
Professional testing may be recommended if:
Brown water is ongoing or unexplained
You live in an older building with unknown plumbing
There are concerns about metals or contaminants
Families with babies or during pregnancy should take extra care:
Do not use brown water for formula preparation
Avoid bathing infants in discolored water
Use bottled or filtered water until clarity returns
Escalate issues promptly rather than waiting
Brown water often looks worse than it is—but families with infants should always err on the side of caution.