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The City of Tucson is proud of Tucson’s rich history of water stewardship. Tucson Water and the Tucson community are building on shared traditions to innovate and sustain the Sonoran Desert’s most valuable resource as we design our water future.
Access your bill portal here and learn about Tucson Water's wide variety of methods available to pay your utility bill.
Complete forms to start or stop your residential water service, learn how to detect water leaks, a water audit, receive free home conservation materials, and how to resolve a high water bill.
The One Water approach treats all water resources as equally important, including surface water, groundwater, recycled water, and rain and stormwater harvesting. While conservation and smart water usage is a shared responsibility, Tucson Water is the primary steward of our precious water system.
Providing clean drinking water to all the residents of the Tucson metropolitan area is no easy feat, considering the city sits in the middle of the Sonoran Desert. But Tucson Water solves this problem by tapping into about 200 groundwater wells located throughout Pima County.
The City Council this week announced its intent to raise water rates for Tucson Water customers. The two-fold increases: higher rates for industrial and commercial customers; and a rise in the ...
TUCSON, Ariz. - (KGUN) — Close to three quarters of a million people living in the Tucson Basin count on a key city utility to get the most precious resource in the desert into their homes and...
Sign up at https://www.tucsonaz.gov/water/payutility. Enroll and add your utility account to set up paperless billing, schedule autopay, make one-time payments, view your bill, set up email/text payment reminders, and manage multiple accounts.
Thousands of Tucson Water customers behind on their bills will have to start paying up soon as the city plans to lift a moratorium on utility shut-offs in mid-March.
When it comes to Tucson's water supply, it is more important how much it snows in Colorado than how much it rains in Tucson, says John Kmiec, director of Tucson Water.