The evidence suggests that PFAS contamination can reduce property value and make resale harder, especially when three things occur together: the contamination affects drinking water or soil, the risk becomes public knowledge, and buyers fear long-term health, legal, or mortgage risk. PFAS compounds matter in property markets because they persist in the environment and can be hard and costly to remove. For that reason, they can create both a physical risk and a market stigma. The problem is not only whether a house can be lived in today. It is also whether a future buyer, lender, insurer, or solicitor will regard the property as safe, saleable, and free from future liability.
A recent economic study of PFAS in drinking water found that public media coverage of PFAS contamination reduced the value of affected homes. The authors used residential sale data and a difference-in-differences design, which compares affected homes with similar homes before and after the contamination became known. They found that high-profile public knowledge of PFAS risk had a negative effect on house prices, and they also found signs of social sorting, where those with more choice could move away while others remained exposed (Marcus, 2024). (ScienceDirect) This is crucial because contamination affects value through both exposure and perception. Even when technical risk remains contested, the market may respond to uncertainty.
The wider evidence on contaminated land supports the same point. Studies of hazardous waste sites and other forms of environmental contamination have long found lower residential values near contaminated sites. Kiel and Williams (2007), in a study of Superfund sites in the United States, note that the negative effect of such sites on local property values has become an established empirical finding. (IDEAS/RePEc) A later meta-analysis found that proximity to severely contaminated waste sites has a strong negative effect on residential property values. It estimated that, after allowing for publication bias, property values rose by about 1.5% to 2.9% for each mile farther from a waste site, for a home located one mile away (Schütt, 2021). (Springer) These figures should not be used as direct estimates for any single estate, but they show that markets price environmental risk.
Water contamination can be severe because it affects daily life. A property may still stand, but its use value changes if the water supply, garden soil, or local environment becomes suspect. Research on well-water contamination found a 10% fall in property value when a test showed a contaminant above detectable limits, compared with homes where tests did not find contamination (Keane, 2024). (drum.lib.umd.edu) Other work on groundwater and water quality has found that buyers respond to water risk, especially where the risk is known, visible, or hard to avoid. (ScienceDirect)
PFAS may create a sharper resale problem than some other pollutants because it raises linked concerns about health, clean-up, legal duty, and disclosure. In the United States, PFOA and PFOS have been designated hazardous substances under CERCLA, which has raised real-estate concerns about liability, due diligence, and transactions, even where regulators say they will focus action on major polluters rather than ordinary owners. (Reuters) This shows how contamination can affect not only price, but also the practical chance of a sale. A buyer may seek a large discount, a lender may hesitate, an insurer may ask questions, and a solicitor may require clear evidence of remediation.
The main lesson is that contamination damages property value through layered risk. There is the direct risk of exposure, the cost and doubt of remediation, the stigma attached to the site, and the fear that a later sale may fail. Where contamination remains unresolved, the market may cease to treat homes as normal homes. They become distressed assets, with value set less by bricks and fittings than by uncertainty, fear, liability, and trust.
References
Keane, J. (2024). Groundwater contamination and property values: A hedonic analysis. University of Maryland Digital Repository.
Kiel, K. A., & Williams, M. (2007). The impact of Superfund sites on local property values: Are all sites the same? Journal of Urban Economics, 61(1), 170–192.
Marcus, M. (2024). Unregulated contaminants in drinking water: Evidence from PFAS and housing markets. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management.
Schütt, M. (2021). Systematic variation in waste site effects on residential property values: A meta-analysis. Environmental and Resource Economics, 78, 375–412.
Taylor, L. O., Phaneuf, D. J., & Liu, X. (2016). Disentangling property value impacts of environmental contamination from locally undesirable land uses. Journal of Urban Economics, 93, 85–98.

