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Is Waterdrop NSF certified?

Last reviewed July 2026.

Yes — but only some models. Waterdrop filters appear in the public certified listings (NSF), yet the certification is per model, and the models differ on the one thing most buyers care about: lead. Some Waterdrop filters hold NSF/ANSI 53 (health effects, which is where lead lives). Others are certified only to NSF/ANSI 42 — chlorine, taste and odour. Both are honestly "certified". Only one filters lead.

What the listing actually says

ModelStandardsLead (53)Certified capacity$ / certified gallon
WDS-F27 — Samsung DA29-00020B replacement (4-pack) WDS-F27 buy ↗42 53300 gal$0.030
Plus WDP — Samsung DA29-00020B replacement (3-pack) WDP-F27 brand ↗42 53 401300 gal$0.044
Plus WDP-UKF8001 — everydrop Filter 4 / EDR4RXD1 replacement WDP-UKF8001 buy ↗42 53 401300 gal$0.117
WD-F38 — everydrop EDR1RXD1 replacement (3-pack) WD-F38 brand ↗42price pending

WDS-F27: NSF-listed under Qingdao Ecopure Filter Co. to NSF/ANSI 53 (health effects, incl. lead) at a rated capacity of 300 gallons, plus 42. Aftermarket, and genuinely certified — Waterdrop holds hundreds of NSF listings. Retail listings also cite NSF/ANSI 372, which is a lead-free MATERIALS standard (the plastic doesn't leach lead) and is NOT a filtration claim — we exclude it from the standards column.

WDP-F27: The 'Plus' (WDP) line adds NSF/ANSI 401 — PFAS and pharmaceuticals — on top of 42 and 53. NSF-listed at 300 gallons, same as the standard WDS line. Same brand, same fridge, one extra standard: the Plus/Standard split is Waterdrop's version of Brita's Elite/Standard split, and it is easy to buy the wrong one.

WDP-UKF8001: NSF-listed under Qingdao Ecopure Filter Co. as EFF-6007S / WDP-UKF8001, rated 300 gallons, with NSF/ANSI 53 reduction claims for lead, cyst, benzene, mercury, carbofuran and endrin — plus 42 and 401 (PFOA/PFOS). Replaces Whirlpool everydrop Filter 4 / Maytag UKF8001.

WD-F38: Sold as 'NSF 42 and 372 certified' — which sounds comprehensive and is not. NSF/ANSI 42 is chlorine, taste and odour; NSF/ANSI 372 only certifies that the housing MATERIAL is lead-free, and is not a filtration claim at all. There is no NSF/ANSI 53 listing, so this filter carries NO certified lead claim — while the everydrop EDR1RXD1 it replaces holds 42, 53 AND 401. Swapping to it to save money silently gives up your lead certification.

What those standard numbers mean

Verify it yourself: every Waterdrop row above links the certifier's own listing. If a number here disagrees with the listing, the listing wins — tell us and we'll fix it.

See how Waterdrop ranks on cost per certified gallon against every filter we track →

We do not test filters — we index what accredited certifiers publish, with attribution, and make no health or treatment claims. A certification covers a specific model against a specific standard; it is not a general seal of quality. We are not affiliated with NSF International.

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