Monday, December 29, 2025

Would you drink tap water in Mexico? This official had little choice

To drink or not to drink? The answer in Mexico more often than not is no.

You got it, we’re talking about humble (unfiltered) tap water.

The drinkability (or otherwise) of tap water in the metropolitan area of Guadalajara came up on Friday during an appearance in the Jalisco Congress of the director of the state’s Inter-municipal System of Potable Water and Sewage Services, or SIAPA.

During a grilling from lawmakers over dirty tap water in Guadalajara and other issues, Carlos Enrique Torres Lugo was presented with a challenge by Congresswoman Mara Robles.

Would he drink a glass of water from a faucet connected to the very water system he oversees?

“I went to the kitchen on the second floor of this Congress building and filled a jug of water from the faucet for both of us,” Robles said.

“Can you assure me that we can drink water from the faucet with complete certainty that it is potable?”

Torres nodded, prompting Robles to pour two glasses of congressional tap water, which looked clean enough – at least to the naked eye. And then – after clinking glasses – the lawmaker and the water director drank. Neither displayed any immediate ill effects.

Dirty water has been reported in more than 50 neighborhoods of Guadalajara since July, and residents continue to share evidence online. (@lizcampe/X)

“It’s the first time this has happened!” Robles exclaimed, apparently indicating that Torres isn’t the first water official she has challenged to drink a glass of tap water.

She later joked that they’ll both need to get medical checkups to ensure that they haven’t contracted an illness from drinking the Guadalajara water.

Tap water quality varies across Mexico – as do opinions about whether it is safe to drink – and contamination is caused by different things in different parts of the country.

Choosing to drink tap water or not in Mexico is obviously a personal decision, but in case you’re looking for some advice, the Mexican Association for Correct Hydration, a non-government organization that monitors water quality, “emphatically” advises against it, according to a report by the El Financiero newspaper.

There just may be a reason why bottled water is so popular here.

With reports from Informador and Mural 

7 COMMENTS

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A small caiman or crocodile wearing a white bridal veil with a string tying its snout closed

The top ‘México mágico’ moments of 2025: Rebounding jaguars, caiman brides and tabloid terror

0
As 2025 wraps up, we take a look back at the surreal, sweet and delightfully odd stories that captured readers' imaginations in 2025.
Train derailment in Oaxaca

13 dead and more than 100 injured after train derails in Oaxaca

0
The Interoceanic Train — traveling with 241 passengers and nine crew members — derailed near the small Oaxaca town of Nizanda, about 85 kilometers (53 miles) north of its destination, the port city of Salina Cruz.
An organ grinder in a grinch costumes holds out his hat for coins on a street of Mexico City

Mexico’s week in review: Christmas cheer and heartbreak

3
Christmas week in Mexico brought tidings of economic growth, a terrible accident and a message of holiday unity from President Sheinbaum.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity