City Services
Water & Sewer
Louisiana's Water Office bills for water, sewer, and trash together, keeps the city's drinking water tested and reported every year, and sets up service for new and moving residents.
Billing
Pay & manage your bill
Pay your water bill online, switch to paperless statements, or set up automatic payment so it's never late.
This is a demonstration of the payment flow. Once launched, this connects to the city's billing vendor so payments post directly to your account.
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Set up auto-pay: Authorization Agreement for Preauthorized Payments
Sign up to have your water bill drafted automatically each month. A fillable version is also available.
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Go paperless
Ask to stop paper billing and receive your statement by email instead. Call the Water Office at (573) 754-4132 or email womanager@louisianamo.gov.
Moving or starting fresh
Start, stop, or transfer service
New to Louisiana, moving across town, or closing out an account? Water and trash service are set up together on one application, since both are billed on the same account.
Download the New & Transferred Water & Trash Service application
Return the completed application to the Water Office at City Hall, 202 South 3rd Street, Louisiana, MO 63353, Monday–Friday, 8:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.
Water quality
Is my water safe?
Every year the city publishes a Consumer Confidence Report, the annual water-quality report utilities are required to share with residents, so you can see exactly what's tested and what's found.
2024 Annual Water Quality Report
The Consumer Confidence Report (CCR) for the most recent reporting year.
Read the 2024 water-quality report-
2025 Public Water System Notice
The city's most recent public water system notice, published for residents alongside the annual report.
Also on this account
Sewer & trash
Sewer service is billed on the same account as water, managed through the Water Office. Trash collection is set up at the same time as water service; use the New & Transferred Water & Trash Service application above to start, stop, or move either one.
On a river town's water
A water system built for a working river
Louisiana sits on Mississippi River Pool 24, a stretch of the river managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between the locks and dams at Saverton and Clarksville. The city has always planned around the water at its doorstep: flood stage begins at 15 feet above normal, and Highway 79 floods at the south end of town once the river reaches 20 feet above normal. The elevated Champ Clark Bridge, opened in 2019, was built specifically to stay open through the high water that used to close its predecessor.
That same attentiveness carries over to what comes out of the tap, tested and reported to residents every year in the water-quality report above.
