Florida Water Department – Pay Bill, Contact & Services Guide

Florida Water Bill & Utility Help Guide

Find the Correct Florida Water Bill Portal, Utility Contact, DEP Help or Private Well Guidance

Florida does not have one single “Florida Water Department” that collects every resident’s water bill. Your water bill is usually handled by your city, county, municipal utility, private utility, community development district or special utility district.

This guide helps Florida residents avoid wrong payment pages, identify the correct utility, understand when to contact Florida DEP or the Florida Public Service Commission, test private well water, handle high bills, report water problems and look for assistance before service is at risk.

Important correction: Do not use New York City DEP payment links, phone numbers or addresses for a Florida water bill. Florida water billing is local. Always use the exact utility name printed on your bill.
Bill Payment Local utility City, county, municipal utility, private utility or district.
Drinking Water Oversight Florida DEP / DOH Depends on water system type and county.
Utility Complaints Florida PSC For many regulated utility service or billing issues.
Private Wells Florida DOH Annual bacteria and nitrate testing recommended.

How to Find Your Real Florida Water Department or Utility

The fastest way to find the correct payment portal is to stop searching only “Florida water department” and look at the actual utility name on your bill. In Florida, one neighborhood can be served by a city utility while a nearby subdivision may be served by a county, private company or district.

  1. Find the exact utility name on your bill.
    Look for words like City of, County Utilities, Water Authority, Municipal Utilities, Utility Services, Special District, CDD, or a private company name.
  2. Search the utility name with the city or county.
    Example search style: “utility name + water bill pay + city/county + official.”
  3. Prefer official websites.
    Look for official city/county domains, named utility websites, or payment portals linked directly from the utility website.
  4. Match the service address before paying.
    Confirm the account number, service address, balance and due date before entering card or bank details.
  5. Save proof until posting is confirmed.
    Keep the receipt, payment confirmation, email or screenshot until your utility account shows payment posted.
Payment safety rule: If a website does not clearly show your actual utility name and service address, do not enter payment details.

Choose the Florida Water Help You Actually Need

Florida water searches usually fall into one of these practical problems. Choose the closest situation and follow that path.

I need to pay my bill Find your local utility first, then use the payment portal linked from that utility. Pay safely
I received a shutoff notice Call your local utility before relying only on online payment. Shutoff steps
My bill is too high Check leaks, irrigation, pool filling, sewer charges and billing period changes. High bill checklist
I have water quality concerns Contact your utility first, then the proper DEP or DOH office if needed. Quality help
I use a private well Private well owners are responsible for testing and maintenance. Well testing
I need to file a complaint Use Florida PSC or regulatory contacts only after contacting your utility first. Complaint steps

How to Pay a Florida Water Bill Safely

Because Florida water billing is local, safe payment starts with identifying the right provider. A statewide guide can help you avoid mistakes, but the actual payment portal must come from your city, county or utility.

What your bill says
Likely payment source
Practical payment tip
City utility
Official city website or city utility portal
Search the city name plus “water bill pay” and verify the address before paying.
County utilities
Official county utility billing website
County utilities may serve unincorporated areas and multiple towns.
Private utility company
Named company website or approved payment processor
If regulated, Florida PSC may help with certain service or billing complaints.
CDD or special district
District website or contracted billing company
Do not assume the city handles it just because your address uses the city name.
HOA, apartment or master-metered property
Property manager, HOA or billing service
Ask for written billing rules and how water use is calculated.
Best habit: Bookmark the official payment portal after you verify it once. This prevents repeated search-result mistakes every month.

Florida Water Shutoff Notice or Past-Due Bill: What to Do First

A shutoff notice is different from a normal water bill. Do not assume a payment made through a random third-party page will post fast enough. Your first goal is to confirm the exact balance, deadline and acceptable payment method with your local utility.

Call your utility first: Use the phone number printed on the shutoff notice or official utility website. Ask for the current total due, deadline, payment posting rules and reconnection process.
  1. Read the notice completely.
    Look for service address, account number, due amount, disconnect date, late fees, reconnection fees and payment instructions.
  2. Confirm the current balance.
    Old notices may not include the latest late fees, returned payment charges or new billing cycle.
  3. Use the payment method the utility recommends.
    For urgent accounts, online payment, phone payment or in-person payment may post faster than bank bill pay or mail.
  4. Ask whether you need to call after paying.
    Some utilities may require confirmation before service is protected or restored.
  5. Ask about hardship options.
    If you cannot pay in full, ask about payment arrangements, local assistance, agency pledges or customer-care programs.

Florida Water Bill Assistance: What Still Exists After LIHWAP

Florida’s LIHWAP page says the program is no longer accepting new applications. That does not mean no help exists. It means you should start with your local water utility, local Community Action Agency, county assistance office, 211, church or nonprofit partners, and any utility-specific hardship program.

Start with your utility Ask if they offer payment arrangements, hardship programs, leak adjustments, pledge holds or local agency referral lists.
Then check local agencies Community Action Agencies, county human services, 211 and local nonprofits may know current funds available in your county.

Prepare these documents before asking for help

  • Current water bill and shutoff notice if any.
  • Account number and service address.
  • Photo ID and proof of residence.
  • Proof of income or benefit letters if requested.
  • Lease, mortgage statement or utility responsibility proof if needed.
  • Repair receipts if the high balance came from a leak.
Practical note: Assistance availability changes by county and funding cycle. Call early because agency appointments can fill before your shutoff date.

High Florida Water Bill Checklist

Florida homes often have irrigation systems, pools, outdoor spigots, water softeners and hurricane-season plumbing issues. A high bill should be checked before you dispute it, especially if sewer charges are based on water consumption.

Running toilet A toilet can leak silently and raise water and sewer charges quickly.
Irrigation leak Broken sprinkler heads, stuck valves or overnight irrigation can cause large spikes.
Pool filling Pool top-offs, leaks or refill after maintenance can look like abnormal usage.
Water softener A stuck regeneration cycle can waste water repeatedly.
Outdoor hose Check hose bibs, garden lines, pressure washing and RV/boat washdowns.
Sewer calculation If sewer is tied to water use, a water leak may increase both line items.

Have this ready before contacting the utility

  • Current bill and previous two bills.
  • Account number and service address.
  • Meter readings or account usage screenshots if available.
  • Dates of irrigation, pool filling, pressure washing or guests.
  • Photos, plumber invoice or repair receipt if a leak was found.
  • Payment confirmation if the issue may be payment posting instead of usage.
Ask about leak adjustments: Many Florida utilities have a leak adjustment process, but rules vary locally. Ask your exact utility what proof is required before repairs or receipts are lost.

Florida Drinking Water Quality Concerns: Who to Contact

Water quality concerns should start with your local water utility because they know current treatment, flushing, boil-water notices, construction work and line repairs. If the utility does not resolve the concern, Florida DEP or Florida DOH may be the next step depending on the water system and county.

Concern
First contact
Next step if unresolved
Cloudy, rusty or discolored water
Local utility customer service or water quality line
Ask about flushing, main breaks, hydrant work and Consumer Confidence Report results.
Boil-water notice
Local utility, city/county alerts and official emergency notices
Follow official boil-water instructions until rescission is posted.
Public water system regulation
Utility first
Florida DEP Source & Drinking Water Program or DOH where applicable.
Private well concern
County health department or certified lab guidance
Florida Department of Health private well testing resources.
Health caution: If water has a fuel/chemical smell, sewage contamination, or a posted advisory applies, follow your local health department or utility instructions before using the water.

Florida Private Well Water Testing and Safety

Private well owners are responsible for testing and maintaining their own wells. The Florida Department of Health recommends testing private well water for bacteria and nitrate at least once per year.

  1. Test at least once a year.
    Annual bacteria and nitrate testing is the basic safety habit for Florida private wells.
  2. Test after flooding or hurricanes.
    Floodwater can contaminate wells. Follow county health department instructions after storms.
  3. Use certified testing guidance.
    Your county health department or state lab resources can explain sample collection and where to test.
  4. Do not rely on taste or smell alone.
    Some contaminants cannot be seen, smelled or tasted.
  5. Keep results with home records.
    Save lab reports, treatment records, repairs and well-service invoices.
Official resource: Use the Florida Department of Health private well and well water testing pages for testing guidance, contaminants and lab information.

Florida Water Utility Complaints: DEP, DOH or PSC?

The right complaint path depends on the issue. A late payment, billing error or service complaint may go one direction, while public drinking water quality or private well safety may go another.

Problem type
Start here
Why
Wrong bill, payment posting, shutoff notice
Your local utility
Only the utility can see your account balance, payment status and service order.
Regulated utility complaint
Florida Public Service Commission consumer assistance
PSC provides complaint handling for many regulated utility issues.
Public drinking water quality
Local utility, then Florida DEP or DOH as applicable
Regulatory responsibility can depend on the system and county.
Private well water safety
Florida Department of Health or county health department
Private well owners need testing and health guidance rather than billing support.
Complaint tip: Before filing, collect your account number, bill copies, call dates, names of people spoken to, screenshots, photos, lab reports or repair invoices.

Start, Stop or Transfer Water Service in Florida

Start/stop/transfer rules are local. A city water department, county utility or private company may require different documents. Still, most Florida utility accounts need similar information.

Service request
What to do
Prepare before applying
Start service
Use your local utility’s start-service form or customer service line.
Service address, move-in date, ID, lease/deed if requested, billing contact and deposit/payment method.
Stop service
Request stop service before move-out.
Account number, final date, forwarding address and final payment plan.
Transfer service
Ask whether the utility supports transfer or requires a new account.
Old address, new address, date of transfer and account holder details.
Tenant/owner change
Clarify who is legally responsible for water service and deposits.
Lease, closing date, owner/tenant contact and service address.

Official Florida Water Resources

Use these official resources for statewide water oversight, utility complaints, private well testing and water assistance status. For actual bill payment, use your local utility.

Florida DEP Source & Drinking Water Program

State drinking water program information and public water system oversight resources.

Open Florida DEP drinking water
Florida DEP Division of Water Resource Management

State water resource management information, including public water system program links.

Open DEP water division
Florida Public Service Commission Consumer Assistance

Consumer help and utility complaint resources for regulated utility issues.

Open PSC consumer help
Florida PSC Complaint Form

Use this after trying to resolve an eligible regulated utility issue with the utility first.

Open complaint form
Florida Department of Health Private Wells

Private well testing, safety and maintenance guidance for Florida residents.

Open private well guidance
Florida Well Water Testing

Florida DOH laboratory guidance for well water testing and sample information.

Open well water testing
Florida LIHWAP Status

Florida LIHWAP states it is no longer accepting new applications and points users to local utilities or community resources.

Open LIHWAP status
Florida Water Quality Status Dashboard

Statewide water quality status information for waterbodies, blooms and related public information.

Open water quality dashboard

Florida Water Department FAQs

Is there one Florida Water Department for all water bills?

No. Florida water bills are usually handled by a city, county, municipal utility, private utility, CDD or special district. Use the exact utility name printed on your bill.

How do I find my official Florida water bill payment portal?

Look at your bill for the utility name, service address and account number. Then search that exact utility name with your city or county and open the official utility payment page.

Why is the old Florida Water Department page wrong?

The old page showed New York City DEP links and phone numbers. Those are not correct for Florida residents. Florida water billing is local and must be handled through the correct local utility.

Who regulates drinking water systems in Florida?

Florida DEP has the primary role for many public water systems, while the Florida Department of Health has responsibilities for certain counties and private or limited-use systems.

Where do I complain about a Florida water utility?

Start with your local utility. If it is a regulated utility issue, use Florida Public Service Commission consumer assistance. For drinking water quality concerns, contact the utility first and then Florida DEP or Florida DOH when appropriate.

Is Florida LIHWAP still open for water bill assistance?

Florida LIHWAP states that it is no longer accepting new applications. Contact your local water utility, local Community Action Agency, county assistance office or 211 for current local options.

How often should I test a private well in Florida?

Florida Department of Health recommends private well owners test for bacteria and nitrate at least once per year. Test again after flooding, hurricanes or suspected contamination.

What should I do if my Florida water bill is suddenly high?

Check toilets, irrigation, pools, outdoor spigots, water softeners, sewer charges and billing-period changes. Then contact your local utility with bill copies, usage screenshots and repair proof if available.

Who handles water emergencies in Florida?

Your local utility handles water emergencies for your address. Use the emergency or after-hours number printed on your bill or official utility website.

Can I pay a Florida water bill through a third-party site?

Only use a third-party payment processor if your official utility links to it. Random payment sites may charge extra, post slowly or send payment to the wrong account.

How do I start or stop water service in Florida?

Use your local utility’s start/stop service form or customer service line. Prepare your service address, move date, ID, lease/deed if requested, forwarding address and final payment method.

Is WaterBillGuide.us the official Florida water agency?

No. WaterBillGuide.us is an independent informational guide. It does not process payments, regulate utilities, access accounts, test water, approve assistance or dispatch repair crews.

Best Next Step for Florida Water Customers

If you need to pay a bill, start with the exact utility name on your bill. If you have a water emergency, call your local utility’s emergency number. If you have a private well, use Florida DOH well testing guidance. If you have an unresolved regulated utility complaint, use Florida PSC consumer assistance.

Editorial Review and Independent Guide Disclaimer

This replacement article was written to correct the old page’s incorrect New York City water department information. It is designed as a statewide Florida water utility guide that helps users find the correct local bill payment portal, understand DEP/DOH/PSC roles, check private well guidance and avoid unsafe payment pages.

WaterBillGuide.us is not a Florida government agency, water utility, regulator or payment processor. We do not process payments, access accounts, test water, approve assistance, regulate utilities or dispatch repair crews. For account-specific help, contact the utility named on your bill.

Official resources checked include Florida DEP Source & Drinking Water Program, Florida DEP Division of Water Resource Management, Florida Public Service Commission Consumer Assistance, Florida Department of Health private well and well testing resources, Florida LIHWAP status page and Florida water quality dashboard resources.

Water Bill Payment, Leak & Utility Help Toolkit

Use this free helper to find the official water bill portal, avoid unsafe payment pages, handle late bills, troubleshoot high usage, prepare start/stop service documents, and contact the utility office with the right details.

Find official payment pages safely
Prepare before late fees or shutoff
Check high bill and leak causes
Useful on every city water guide

Official Water Bill Portal Finder

Enter your city, state, and utility name. This tool creates safe search shortcuts for the official bill pay portal, customer service page, outage line, and start/stop service page.

Safety tip: Use the official city, county, or utility website when paying a water bill. Do not enter card or bank details on a page that only looks like a payment portal but does not clearly identify the official utility.

Safe Water Bill Payment Checklist

Before paying online, use this checklist to reduce the risk of wrong payment, duplicate payment, missed receipt, or third-party confusion.

Important: Some official utilities use third-party processors. That can be normal, but the payment processor should be linked from the official utility website and show clear fee/payment details.

Late Bill, Shutoff Notice & Reconnection Action Plan

Select your situation and get practical next steps. This helps users act quickly without guessing.

Do not wait: If you received a shutoff notice, online payment alone may not stop disconnection. Call the utility billing office and save your confirmation number.

High Water Bill & Leak Troubleshooter

A high bill can be caused by leaks, irrigation, estimated readings, seasonal use, or account/meter issues. Choose the closest problem below.

Quick leak test Turn off all water, then check whether the meter still moves.
Toilet check Put food coloring in tank. If color reaches bowl without flushing, there may be a leak.
Ask utility Request usage history, meter reread, leak adjustment policy, and payment arrangement options.

Start, Stop or Transfer Water Service Checklist

Moving in or out? Choose your situation and prepare the details most utilities commonly request.

Your preparation checklist

Move-out tip: Ask for a final meter read, final bill date, refund/deposit process, and confirmation number when stopping service.

Payment Assistance & Arrangement Finder

If you cannot pay the full water bill, this guide helps you decide what to ask before disconnection or extra fees.

Helpful document list: Keep your account number, photo ID, service address, bill copy, shutoff notice, income proof if needed, repair receipt if leak-related, and payment confirmation numbers.

Water Department Call Script Generator

Generate a clear call or email script before contacting the utility billing office.