Podcast

Why Are U.S. Water and Sewer Bills Rising Faster Than Inflation?

 
31 Mar 2026  |  Episode #140  |  with Megan Bondar

U.S. household water and sewer bills rose 5.1% in 2025—the steepest annual increase in five years and a 24.2% jump since 2020. Rates are rising faster than general inflation, with chemicals, energy, labor, and construction all contributing to sustained upward pressure.

Bluefield analyst Megan Bondar joins Reese Tisdale to unpack new data covering 50 major U.S. cities. The conversation examines why water and wastewater rates are moving at different speeds, how regional factors shape what households pay, and what structural forces are locking in higher costs for the long term.

Key questions addressed:

  • What’s really breaking in the utility cost model as rates outpace inflation?
  • What does the divergence between water and wastewater rates signal about where utilities are being forced to spend?
  • At what point do rising bills become a real affordability crisis—and how close are we?
  • Why do water bills vary so dramatically by location, and what does that reveal about the U.S. water sector?
  • What structural forces—infrastructure, climate, and regulation—are locking in higher rates going forward?

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The Future of Water podcast series is where Bluefield water experts talk about all the ways in which companies, utilities, and people are addressing the challenges and opportunities in water. Thank you for listening. Refer your colleagues. Please give us a review on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify.