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Emergency Preparedness · Water Safety · Survival Basics

7 Myths About Water You Need To Know In an Emergency

7 Myths About Water You Need To Know In an Emergency

What you think you know about water could get you sick when it matters most.

What you think you know about water could get you sick when it matters most.

By the PureFlow Team  ·  Updated April 2026

By the PureFlow Team  ·  Updated April 2026

2Most people have a rough mental model of water safety. Boil it if you're unsure. Clear water is clean water. Bottled water lasts forever. It's the kind of knowledge that feels solid until you actually need it — and then it falls apart fast. In an emergency, the wrong assumption isn't an inconvenience. It's a health risk. Here are seven water myths that get people into trouble, and what's actually true.

Myth 1

"If the water looks clear, it's safe to drink."

"If the water looks clear, it's safe to drink."

Appearance is one of the most misleading indicators of water safety. Bacteria, protozoa, viruses, and microplastics are invisible to the naked eye. A still, crystal-clear mountain stream can be carrying Giardia or Cryptosporidium shed by wildlife upstream. Urban floodwater after a disaster may look murky or may look almost normal — either way, it's likely contaminated with sewage, chemical runoff, and biological material. Clarity tells you nothing about biological content. Nothing.

The Reality

Contaminated water almost always looks completely normal.

Myth 2

"Boiling water kills everything."

"Boiling water kills everything."

Boiling does kill bacteria, viruses, and protozoa — it's genuinely effective for biological contamination. But it does nothing for heavy metals, microplastics, pesticides, or chemical runoff. In an industrial area, near agricultural land, or in the aftermath of infrastructure failure, the chemical load in water can be just as dangerous as the biological one. Boiling also requires fuel, a container, and time. In a fast-moving emergency, none of those are guaranteed. And once you've boiled water, it can be recontaminated the moment it's poured into an unclean vessel.

The Reality

Boiling handles biology but not chemistry — and requires resources you may not have.

Myth 3

"I can last a few days without water if I have to."

"I can last a few days without water if I have to."

The widely-cited "three days without water" figure is a maximum under calm, cool, sedentary conditions — not a planning target. In heat, in physical exertion, or in the stress of an actual emergency, the human body can become dangerously dehydrated within 24 hours. Cognitive function degrades before you feel critically thirsty. Decision-making, physical coordination, and judgment all slip before most people recognize they need water. In a survival context, those are the exact capacities you cannot afford to lose.

The Reality

Dehydration impairs judgment long before it becomes life-threatening — and in a crisis, judgment is everything.

Myth 4

"Bottled water is indefinitely safe if it's sealed."

"Bottled water is indefinitely safe if it's sealed."

The water inside a sealed bottle doesn't expire — but the bottle itself does. Plastics leach compounds into the water over time, particularly under heat and UV light. A case of water stored in a garage, a car trunk, or a shed through a hot summer is not the same as water stored in a cool, dark space. Beyond chemical leaching, people routinely stockpile far less bottled water than they'd actually need. The math rarely works out: a minimum of one gallon per person per day adds up fast the moment an emergency runs longer than expected.

The Reality

Sealed water stays biologically safe, but plastic storage conditions matter — and most people stockpile far too little.

Myth 5

"Running water from a stream is safe — it's constantly refreshed."

"Running water from a stream is safe — it's constantly refreshed."

The logic is intuitive but wrong. Moving water doesn't filter itself. A fast-running stream can carry Giardia just as effectively as a still pond, because the source of contamination — animal waste, agricultural runoff, upstream human activity — replenishes continuously. In fact, moving water can distribute contaminants more widely than stagnant sources. The speed of the current is irrelevant to what's dissolved or suspended in it. "It's running" is not a safety criterion. It never was.

The Reality

Movement doesn't purify water. Contamination travels downstream just as well as water does.

Myth 6

"Purification tablets are just as good as a filter — and easier to carry."

"Purification tablets are just as good as a filter — and easier to carry."

Chemical tablets — iodine or chlorine-based — do kill most biological pathogens when used correctly. But they require contact time (often 30 minutes or more, longer in cold water), they're ineffective against Cryptosporidium without special formulas, they don't remove sediment or improve taste, and they have a shelf life. In a genuine emergency, the last thing you want is to discover your tablets expired two years ago or that your water is too cold for them to work in time. A mechanical filter has none of those failure modes. It works the same at 35 degrees as it does at 75.

The Reality

Tablets have real limitations — contact time, temperature sensitivity, and a shelf life that mechanical filtration simply doesn't have.

Myth 7

"I'll figure out water access when something actually happens."

"I'll figure out water access when something actually happens."

This is the most dangerous myth of all, because it feels like reasonable confidence rather than denial. The families who struggled most after Hurricane Ian, the residents of Jackson during the water crisis, the households that spent days in line after infrastructure failed — none of them thought they were unprepared. They just assumed the system would hold or that something would be available. Access to clean water collapses faster than almost any other emergency resource. Gas stations run dry. Store shelves clear in hours. The window to improvise is much narrower than people expect, and it closes at exactly the moment when stress makes clear thinking hardest.

The Reality

Water access fails early in any emergency — and the decision to be prepared can only be made before one starts.

None of these myths are obscure. Most of them are things reasonable, intelligent people believe — because they've never had to test them. The difference between a prepared household and an unprepared one usually isn't knowledge or resources. It's the decision to act on what you know before you have to. Fortunately, the fix is simpler than most people expect.

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