Tap Water in SN2
Swindon Rodbourne — Thames Water
Tap water in Swindon Rodbourne, supplied by Thames Water, has the character of a chalk aquifer source, typical of southern and eastern England. It’s hard water, well above the national average, with a total hardness of 309 mg/L as CaCO₃. Bicarbonate is high at 279 mg/L: this water suits dark-roasted, milk-based coffee well, but will strip the acidity from lighter roasts and pour-over brewing.
Estimated from the nearest measured zone, Lambourn (22.8 km away). Thames Water has not yet published a water-quality report for the Swindon Rodbourne zone, which appears in their 2025 supply-zone boundaries. We will update with measured values once they are released.
Mineral composition
| mg/L | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium | ~121 | ||
| Magnesium | ~2 | ||
| Sodium | ~12 | ||
| Sulfate | ~21 | ||
| Chloride | ~46 | ||
| Bicarbonate | ~279 | ||
| ~ Estimated by inheriting from Lambourn (22.8 km away). | |||
Additional info
| Hardness | 309 as CaCO₃ |
| Alkalinity | 229 as CaCO₃ |
| pH | 7.4 |
| Conductivity | 575 µS/cm |
| Source | Thames Water |
| Data year | 2024 |
What this means
Kettle & appliances
Limescale is a persistent issue. Kettles fur up quickly, and boilers, dishwashers, and washing machines all accumulate scale that reduces efficiency and shortens lifespan. Water treatment (a softener, inhibitor, or filter) is strongly recommended.
Espresso
Scale is a serious concern at this level: machines need regular descaling and filtration is strongly recommended. In the cup, the water has strong opinions. Light roasts lose their acidity and origin character almost entirely. But dark-roasted, milk-based espresso can work well here. London’s coffee culture developed around exactly this kind of water: strong, dark-roasted coffee served with milk, where the density and body that hard water produces become a virtue rather than a flaw.
Filter & pour-over
Hard water hits filter coffee harder than espresso because the brewing ratio gives it more influence. Lighter roasts will taste flat and indistinct; the buffering neutralises the acidity that carries fruit and floral notes. Darker roasts produce a drinkable but heavy cup. If you’re brewing pour-over with water this hard, the water is the first thing to address.
Drinking & cooking
Noticeably mineral-heavy on the palate. Soap and shampoo lather poorly. Tea may develop a film on the surface (that’s the calcium reacting with tannins). Cooking water may leave a chalky residue on pans.
Bicarbonate
Heavily buffered water that resists pH change substantially: suited only to the darkest, most roast-forward beer styles (and even then may need dilution), while espresso at this level will taste dull, chalky, and lacking definition, with almost all origin character neutralised by the alkalinity.
Closest water profiles
Nearby areas
Data sourced from Thames Water (2024). Looking for a specific address? Look up your full postcode for the most accurate result.