EPA & FEMA data · Plain English

Know the environmental profile of any address.

See your A–F grades free — air quality, drinking water, PFAS forever chemicals, flood risk, and nearby cleanup sites, pulled from EPA, FEMA, and DoD public records. Pay only if you want the full findings.

Built from EPA, FEMA, AirNow, and Census-backed public records. First-screening tool, not a professional environmental assessment.

A
B
C
D
One grade per category. No jargon.
EPA AirNow
EPA SDWIS
EPA UCMR 5
EPA ECHO
EPA Superfund
EPA Radon Zones
EPA UST Finder
FEMA
DoD PFAS
Census ACS

See your A–F grades — free

Enter any U.S. address — we pull federal records and grade each category. The grade preview is free; unlock the full findings only if you want them.

Uses EPA, FEMA, AirNow, UCMR 5, DoD PFAS, and Census-backed public records. We use your email to retrieve your report. No spam.

Free A–F preview · No credit card · We never sell your data

We start your address profile right away, then check EPA, FEMA, AirNow, public water, and Census-backed records where available. Public sources may take a short time to respond.

Want to see the full deliverable first?

Preview a sample unlocked profile with findings, source links, and next verification steps.

View sample full profile

What's included

Five categories. One clear picture.

Five graded categories built from 8+ federal signals — each pulls real public records, grades them A–F, and tells you exactly what to look into and what to ask.

💨

Air Quality

30-day AQI trends and unhealthy-day counts from EPA AirNow, plus the county's EPA radon-zone potential and whether a home test is worth it.

💧

Drinking Water

Compliance violations filed against the matched public water utility in EPA's Safe Drinking Water system.

⚗️

Forever Chemicals (PFAS)

UCMR 5 detections in the matched water utility, nearby industrial PFAS sources from EPA TRI, and DoD military installations with known AFFF history.

🌊

Flood & Hazard Risk

FEMA flood zone designation, Special Flood Hazard Area status, and the National Risk Index for the census tract.

🏭

Pollution & Cleanup

Superfund sites with tiered distances, leaking underground storage tanks, lead-paint-era housing context, and EPA-regulated facility counts — each measured against what's typical for the county.

How it works

Done in three steps.

1

Enter an address

Type any U.S. street address. Autocomplete fills in the city, state, and ZIP automatically.

2

We pull federal records

Air quality, radon potential, water compliance, PFAS detections, flood maps, Superfund and underground-tank proximity, and lead-era housing — from EPA, FEMA, DoD, and Census public records.

3

Get a graded report

Each category gets an A–F grade with plain-English context and a specific next step if something needs attention.

Why not just use free tools?

You should — and we built on top of them.

The free tools are genuinely good at what they cover. The gap is that no single one shows the whole environmental picture for one address.

Listing sites (Redfin, Realtor.com)

Covers: Flood and wildfire risk scores right on the listing.

The gap: No PFAS, no Superfund or tank proximity, no radon or lead-era context — and the scores use proprietary modeling without linking you to the underlying federal records.

EWG Tap Water Database

Covers: Utility-level water quality results by ZIP code.

The gap: Strong for drinking water, but it stops there — no flood, air, cleanup-site, or housing-stock context for the address itself.

Federal portals (EPA, FEMA, AirNow)

Covers: The authoritative source data — all of it free.

The gap: Spread across 7+ separate sites, organized by facility or map panel rather than by address. Plan 1–2 hours per address to pull it yourself.

VetMyAddress combines those sources — plus PFAS testing results, Superfund and underground-tank proximity with tiered distances, county radon potential, and lead-era housing context — into one A–F graded profile with a specific next verification step for every finding.

A professional Phase I environmental assessment runs $2,000+ and is built for commercial deals. This is the $19.99public-record screen that tells you what the records show — and what's worth verifying properly.

Common questions

Environmental reports by address, explained

Frequently asked questions

What is an environmental report for an address?

An environmental report for an address is a summary of what public federal records show near a specific property — air quality, drinking water, PFAS, flood risk, and pollution/cleanup sites. VetMyAddress grades each of 5 categories A–F from 8+ federal datasets (EPA, FEMA, DoD, Census) and links the official source for every finding.

What does VetMyAddress check?

VetMyAddress checks 8+ federal signals across 5 graded categories: air quality (EPA AirNow) plus the county's EPA radon zone; drinking water compliance (EPA SDWIS); PFAS (EPA UCMR 5, TRI, and nearby DoD installations); flood risk (FEMA); and pollution and cleanup — Superfund sites with tiered distances, leaking/underground storage tanks, lead-paint-era housing, and county benchmarks.

How much does an environmental report cost?

The A–F grade preview is free. The full Environmental Profile is $19.99 for one address or $29.99 for a two-address bundle — a one-time payment, not a subscription, with a 7-day money-back guarantee. A professional Phase I Environmental Site Assessment, by contrast, typically runs $2,000 or more.

Where does the data come from?

The data comes entirely from public federal sources: the EPA (AirNow, SDWIS, UCMR 5, TRI, ECHO, Superfund/SEMS, UST Finder, Map of Radon Zones), FEMA (National Flood Hazard Layer and National Risk Index), the Department of Defense PFAS installation report, and the U.S. Census. Every finding links back to its official source so you can verify it yourself.

Browse by City

PFAS & water quality by city

City-level summaries from EPA UCMR 5, Toxics Release Inventory, and DoD PFAS assessments. Pick a city for context, or run an address-level report for the specific home you're evaluating.

Mississippi

Rhode Island

South Dakota

West Virginia