Good news for wild swimmers as bathing water quality improves
Good news for wild swimmers as bathing water quality improves 25 November 2025 Share Save Mark Poynting , Climate and science reporter and Jonah Fisher , Environment correspondent Share Save PA The number of monitored bathing sites in England meeting minimum standards for water quality has risen slightly since last year, according to new figures from the Environment Agency.
That is better than the 92% of 2024.
The summer of 2025 was particularly dry.
All else being equal, that should lead to less pollution, with less runoff from rainfall.
The latest figures cover a four-year period from 2022 to 2025, where measurements are available.
The percentage of sites rated "poor" – failing to meet minimum standards – fell from 8% to 7%.
But that is still the second highest figure over the past decade.
Of the 14 river sites, only two met the minimum standards.
Rivers are often closer to pollution sources too.
The latest figures come after the EA gave England's water companies their worst ever combined marks last month for their environmental performance in 2024, amid a spike in serious pollution incidents. And in July a landmark review of the "failing" water sector in England and Wales recommended stronger regulation to hold water companies to account. But it warned that there would be no quick fixes to improve the state of our rivers or bring down bills. In response to today's figures, a spokesperson for Water UK said: "These results show that the quality of English bathing water remains high with 87% achieving a 'good' or 'excellent' rating. "This is a stark contrast to the 1990s when less than a third of bathing waters would have met today's standards
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Avg_Ai_Score: 67.0
- Block_Scores:
- Total_Blocks: 25.0
- Avg_User_Score:
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