Drinking Water Reports & Bylaws in Surrey

Utilities and Infrastructure British Columbia 4 Minutes Read · published February 12, 2026 Flag of British Columbia

Surrey, British Columbia maintains public information on drinking water quality through municipal and regional partners. This guide explains where to find official water quality reports, which agencies publish testing results, how to request records, and the enforcement pathways for bylaw or system issues. Use the links below to access annual reports, testing summaries, and provincial standards so you can verify compliance and follow steps to report concerns.

Where to find official drinking water quality reports

The primary sources for Surrey drinking water information are the City of Surrey utilities pages, the Metro Vancouver drinking water quality reports, and provincial drinking water guidance from British Columbia. Check annual or periodic reports for parameters, sampling locations, and any advisories. For regional treatment and source information, Metro Vancouver publishes system-level summaries and water quality testing results Metro Vancouver drinking water quality[2]. For local system notices and customer advisories consult the City of Surrey utilities pages City of Surrey water services[1], and for regulatory standards and approvals see the British Columbia government drinking water pages BC drinking water guidance[3].

Official reports typically include testing results and sampling schedules.

How to request records and reports

  • Check the City of Surrey utilities or reports page for posted annual reports and advisories.
  • Contact Surrey Utilities or the City utilities contact centre to request specific sampling data or historical reports.
  • For provincial approvals and licence documents, request records via the BC Ministry of Health or the Drinking Water Officer named on the system record.

Penalties & Enforcement

Enforcement for drinking water matters in Surrey can involve municipal actions, regional operators, and provincial regulators depending on the issue. Municipal responsibilities may include local distribution maintenance and bylaw compliance, while source treatment and supply are managed regionally. The specific monetary fines, escalation schedules, and non-monetary sanctions are not fully listed on the cited municipal and regional pages and are therefore not specified on the cited page. For provincial regulatory enforcement and orders consult the BC drinking water pages linked above [3].

  • Fine amounts: not specified on the cited City or Metro Vancouver pages; see provincial guidance for statutory penalties where applicable.
  • Escalation: first, repeat, and continuing offence procedures are not specified on the cited municipal pages.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: may include remedial orders, service disconnection, or court action; specific remedies are not specified on the cited City pages.
  • Enforcer and inspection: primary contacts include City of Surrey Utilities and By-law Enforcement for local distribution issues, Metro Vancouver for regional supply and treatment, and the BC Drinking Water Officer for provincial enforcement [1][2][3].
  • Complaint/report pathway: file a service request with City of Surrey Utilities or contact the provincial Drinking Water Officer as directed on BC pages.
If you suspect an immediate health risk, contact local health authorities and your water supplier right away.

Applications & Forms

The City of Surrey does not publish a specific public "water quality report" application form on its utilities page; individual data requests or service complaints are typically handled through Surrey Utilities service request channels or by contacting the listed provincial contacts for formal records requests. For licences and approvals controlling source and treatment, consult provincial application forms on the BC government site; if a specific form is required it will be published on the linked pages [3].

Action steps

  • Find and read the latest annual or periodic water quality report on the City of Surrey utilities page or Metro Vancouver site.
  • Request specific sampling records from Surrey Utilities if the online reports do not include the data you need.
  • Report concerns or suspected contamination to Surrey Utilities and, for health risks, to Fraser Health or the provincial Drinking Water Officer.
Document dates, sample locations, and any correspondence when you make a records request.

FAQ

Who publishes Surrey drinking water quality reports?
The City of Surrey posts local notices and system information, Metro Vancouver publishes regional treatment and water quality summaries, and the BC government provides regulatory standards and approvals.
How can I get historical test results for my neighbourhood?
Request records from the City of Surrey Utilities or consult Metro Vancouver reports; if unavailable, contact the provincial Drinking Water Officer as directed on BC pages.
Who do I contact about a boil water advisory or suspected contamination?
Contact Surrey Utilities immediately and follow guidance from Fraser Health or the provincial health authority.

How-To

  1. Locate the City of Surrey utilities or water services page and check for posted water quality reports.
  2. If the report you need is not online, submit a service request or data request to Surrey Utilities explaining the dates and sample locations you need.
  3. If you receive no response or the issue is a public health concern, contact Fraser Health or the BC Drinking Water Officer as directed on provincial pages.
  4. Keep copies of all correspondence and any lab reports or notices you receive for appeals or further enforcement action.

Key Takeaways

  • City of Surrey and Metro Vancouver are the primary publishers of drinking water reports affecting Surrey.
  • For enforcement and health risks, contact Surrey Utilities, Fraser Health, and the provincial Drinking Water Officer.

Help and Support / Resources


  1. [1] City of Surrey - Water services
  2. [2] Metro Vancouver - Drinking water quality
  3. [3] Government of British Columbia - Drinking water