PFAS testing · EPA Method 537

EPA Method 537

Largely historical; generally use 537.1 instead. May be referenced in older datasets or specific legacy programs. Not the best choice for new drinking-water projects.

Matrix
Drinking water (finished/treated drinking water)
Analytes
14 PFAS analytes (original 2009 method)
Status
EPA-published (2009, Version 1.1). Still a valid drinking-water method but largely superseded by Method 537.1 (which added 4 analytes including GenX/HFPO-DA) for most applications.
Official source
https://www.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods

When to use EPA Method 537

Largely historical; generally use 537.1 instead. May be referenced in older datasets or specific legacy programs. Not the best choice for new drinking-water projects.

Not sure this is the right method?

Pick the method by your matrix first, then by data-quality needs. DRINKING WATER (tap, well, finished/treated water): use EPA Method 537.1 (18 PFAS, includes GenX) and/or EPA Method 533 (25 PFAS, short-chain focus, isotope dilution). Together they cover 29 unique PFAS, and both are EPA-approved for compliance monitoring under the PFAS National Primary Drinking Water Regulation. For a home/well drinking-water test, a lab certified for 537.1 and/or 533 is what you want. Method 537 (the original 2009, 14 analytes) is mostly historical -- prefer 537.1. NON-POTABLE / ENVIRONMENTAL samples (wastewater, surface water, groundwater, soil, sediment, biosolids/sludge, landfill leachate, fish tissue): use EPA Method 1633/1633A (40 PFAS, isotope dilution, multi-matrix; finalized Dec 2024 and proposed for CWA approval but not yet nationally mandated). For aqueous-only environmental screening under RCRA/SW-846, Method 8327 (24 PFAS, external standard) exists but is generally superseded by 1633 for serious work. Quick rule: drinking water = 533 + 537.1; everything else (soil/sludge/wastewater/tissue) = 1633.

Compare all methods on the PFAS testing overview.

Find a lab accredited for EPA Method 537

For DRINKING WATER PFAS testing, use a state-certified drinking-water laboratory: start at EPA's drinking-water lab certification page, which links to each state's certification program and lists of state-certified labs (EPA: 'Contact Information for Certification Programs and Certified Laboratories for Drinking Water'). Confirm the lab holds certification specifically for EPA Method 537.1 and/or 533 for the PFAS analytes you care about. For ENVIRONMENTAL/non-potable PFAS (soil, wastewater, biosolids, tissue), look for a lab accredited under TNI/NELAP for the relevant method (e.g., 1633, 8327) -- search the TNI LAMS (Laboratory Accreditation Management System) by lab name, state, accreditation body, and field of accreditation, and verify the specific PFAS analytes/method are listed in their scope. Always verify (1) the exact method, (2) the matrix, and (3) the specific analytes are on the lab's current accreditation/certification scope before sampling, since scopes change (e.g., many accreditation bodies added PFAS fields of accreditation effective Jan 1, 2025).

Reviewed by The LabVetted editorial team · Compiled from official EPA & state sources, June 25, 2026. Confirm current accreditation directly, how we verify.

Information only, not technical or legal advice. Confirm the appropriate method and the lab's current accreditation before sampling.

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