Puerto Rico’s wastewater infrastructure presents a unique and dynamic environment for consulting engineers, utility managers, and equipment vendors. Unlike most mainland U.S. states where utilities are managed at the municipal or county level, Puerto Rico’s entire public water and wastewater system is operated by a single entity: the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA), or Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados (AAA). This centralized structure makes PRASA one of the largest water and wastewater utilities in the United States, serving a population of approximately 3.2 million residents.
Currently, PRASA operates 51 wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), down from over 60 in recent years due to strategic facility consolidations designed to improve compliance and operational efficiency. The island’s total wastewater treatment capacity exceeds 350 Million Gallons per Day (MGD). A significant portion of this capacity is concentrated in the San Juan metropolitan area, served by massive regional facilities that utilize deep ocean outfalls under EPA 301(h) waivers.
The regulatory environment in Puerto Rico is tightly overseen by EPA Region 2 and the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources (DNER). PRASA operates under a comprehensive, island-wide EPA Consent Decree initially established in 2003 and heavily modified in 2015 to address sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) and aging infrastructure. Following the devastating impacts of Hurricanes Maria (2017) and Fiona (2022), the island is currently undergoing a historic, multibillion-dollar infrastructure modernization effort, heavily backed by FEMA, HUD CDBG-DR funds, and the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF), presenting unprecedented opportunities for infrastructure planning professionals and service providers.
The last three years have marked a pivotal shift in Puerto Rico’s wastewater sector, transitioning from emergency disaster recovery to long-term resilience and technological modernization. PRASA is currently executing a 10-year, $6.1 billion Capital Improvement Program (CIP), with over $2 billion specifically earmarked for wastewater and sanitary sewer infrastructure.
One of the most critical ongoing initiatives is the island-wide deployment of microgrids, combined heat and power (CHP) systems, and emergency backup generation. Because power grid instability (managed by LUMA Energy/PREPA) frequently leads to pump station failures and SSOs, PRASA has secured hundreds of millions in FEMA 428 alternative procedures funding to ensure every critical WWTP and major pump station has redundant, elevated power sources. Facilities are being hardened against Category 5 hurricanes, with electrical MCCs and SCADA systems being relocated above newly established 500-year flood elevations.
Additionally, PRASA is heavily leveraging federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (IIJA) funding and SRF loans to execute sewer trunk rehabilitations, eliminate aging package plants by tying them into regional systems, and deploy smart-water network technologies. Notable public-private partnerships (P3s) are also being explored for smart metering and biosolid management. Furthermore, climate resilience is driving a push toward advanced sludge dewatering, anaerobic digestion upgrades for biogas recovery, and enhanced coastal protection for shoreline facilities facing sea-level rise.
Below is a comprehensive ranked list of the 20 largest wastewater treatment plants in Puerto Rico by design capacity. Due to PRASA’s centralized nature, all facilities are owned and operated by the Authority, though they serve diverse regional watersheds.
| Rank | Plant Name | City/Municipality | Design Capacity (MGD) | Population Served | Operating Authority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Puerto Nuevo RWWTP | San Juan | 72.0 MGD | ~500,000 | PRASA |
| 2 | Bayamón RWWTP | Bayamón | 60.0 MGD | ~350,000 | PRASA |
| 3 | Carolina RWWTP | Carolina | 45.0 MGD | ~300,000 | PRASA |
| 4 | Mayagüez RWWTP | Mayagüez | 28.0 MGD | ~100,000 | PRASA |
| 5 | Barceloneta RWWTP | Barceloneta | 15.0 MGD | ~60,000* | PRASA |
| 6 | Ponce (Bucaná) RWWTP | Ponce | 14.0 MGD | ~95,000 | PRASA |
| 7 | Arecibo RWWTP | Arecibo | 10.0 MGD | ~65,000 | PRASA |
| 8 | Aguadilla RWWTP | Aguadilla | 8.5 MGD | ~55,000 | PRASA |
| 9 | Caguas WWTP | Caguas | 8.0 MGD | ~70,000 | PRASA |
| 10 | Guayama RWWTP | Guayama | 6.0 MGD | ~40,000 | PRASA |
| 11 | Fajardo WWTP | Fajardo | 5.5 MGD | ~35,000 | PRASA |
| 12 | Humacao WWTP | Humacao | 5.0 MGD | ~30,000 | PRASA |
| 13 | Vega Baja WWTP | Vega Baja | 4.5 MGD | ~35,000 | PRASA |
| 14 | Cayey WWTP | Cayey | 4.0 MGD | ~25,000 | PRASA |
| 15 | Dorado WWTP | Dorado | 3.5 MGD | ~25,000 | PRASA |
| 16 | San Germán WWTP | San Germán | 3.0 MGD | ~20,000 | PRASA |
| 17 | Juncos WWTP | Juncos | 3.0 MGD | ~20,000 | PRASA |
| 18 | Yauco WWTP | Yauco | 2.5 MGD | ~15,000 | PRASA |
| 19 | Coamo WWTP | Coamo | 2.0 MGD | ~15,000 | PRASA |
| 20 | Cidra WWTP | Cidra | 2.0 MGD | ~15,000 | PRASA |
*Barceloneta population equivalent is much higher due to heavy pharmaceutical industrial base.
Treatment Process:
Infrastructure & Recent Upgrades: Puerto Nuevo is the backbone of the San Juan metro area’s sanitation. Due to its coastal location, it suffered severe flooding during Hurricane Maria. PRASA is executing a massive $120M+ hazard mitigation project, elevating critical electrical substations, replacing main influent pumps, and installing a new CHP microgrid to ensure 100% operational autonomy during grid failures. The plant also features an extensive biosolids dewatering facility serving the metro region.
Treatment Process & Infrastructure: Like Puerto Nuevo, Bayamón relies on Advanced Primary Treatment (CEPT) under a 301(h) waiver. It acts as a massive regional hub receiving flows from dozens of peripheral pump stations. Active projects at this facility include a $45M comprehensive SCADA upgrade and the replacement of coarse and fine screening systems to prevent equipment fouling. It is currently undergoing a massive sludge handling facility redesign to increase centrifuge capacity.
Infrastructure & Compliance: The Carolina facility rounds out the “Big Three” metro primary plants. A major focus over the last three years has been odor control, deploying advanced biological scrubbers and activated carbon systems to mitigate impacts on nearby dense urban and tourist areas. Under the EPA Consent Decree, the collection system feeding Carolina is undergoing extensive slip-lining and CIPP (Cured-In-Place Pipe) rehabilitation to reduce heavy Inflow and Infiltration (I&I) during tropical rain events.
Treatment Process & Upgrades: Serving the west coast of the island, this plant also operates via CEPT with a deep ocean outfall. The Mayagüez RWWTP recently completed a $25M outfall structural rehabilitation and diffuser upgrade. Currently, the plant is the site of a $38M electrical hazard mitigation and backup generation project, incorporating highly resilient switchgear designed to withstand seismic events, a major consideration given the seismic swarm activity in southwestern Puerto Rico in 2020.
Treatment Process & Notable Features: Unlike the top four, Barceloneta is a full secondary treatment facility (Activated Sludge). It is arguably the most complex WWTP on the island due to its influent profile: it processes wastewater from one of the densest pharmaceutical manufacturing hubs in the world. The plant utilizes robust preliminary equalization, extended aeration, and advanced biological nutrient removal to handle complex organic loads and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). Strict industrial pretreatment programs (IPP) are enforced here. Recent upgrades involve $20M in aeration blower modernizations using high-efficiency turbo blowers.
Puerto Rico is executing one of the largest consolidated water infrastructure programs in the hemisphere. Over $2 billion in wastewater projects are advancing through FEMA, HUD, and EPA SRF pipelines.
Puerto Nuevo RWWTP – $115 Million Hazard Mitigation & Resiliency Project
Ponce (Bucaná) RWWTP – $42 Million Secondary Treatment Rehabilitation
Bayamón RWWTP – $65 Million Biosolids & Dewatering Expansion
The regulatory environment for wastewater in Puerto Rico is stringent, shaped predominantly by a sweeping EPA Consent Decree (Civil Action No. 15-2283). Originally established to address decades of chronic Sanitary Sewer Overflows (SSOs), poor maintenance, and effluent violations, the decree was heavily renegotiated following Hurricane Maria to allow PRASA to align environmental compliance schedules with FEMA disaster recovery funding timelines.
For engineering firms, this means almost all major collection system rehabilitations, pump station upgrades, and plant modernizations are strictly timeline-driven under federal oversight. Compliance reporting is rigorous.
Another major regulatory feature is the Section 301(h) waivers for Puerto Rico’s largest coastal facilities (Puerto Nuevo, Bayamón, Carolina, Mayagüez, Aguadilla, Ponce). These waivers allow PRASA to discharge primary or advanced-primary treated effluent into deep ocean waters without full secondary biological treatment, provided they meet strict marine water quality standards. Maintaining these waivers requires extensive coastal monitoring, toxicity testing, and highly engineered, deep-water outfall diffusers.
Furthermore, emerging contaminants, particularly PFAS, are becoming a focal point. While PRASA’s primary focus remains on basic sanitation and infrastructure resilience, EPA Region 2 is beginning to enforce PFAS monitoring in PRASA’s industrial pretreatment programs, particularly given the island’s heavy pharmaceutical and manufacturing footprint in areas like Barceloneta and Juncos.
Puerto Rico faces compounding infrastructure challenges that create distinct opportunities for specialized engineering, consulting, and equipment manufacturing firms.
Because of the unique challenges mentioned above, technology adoption in Puerto Rico is heavily skewed toward resiliency and remote autonomy rather than hyper-advanced biological nutrient removal (except in sensitive inland watersheds).
Key Trends:
Browse our comprehensive directory of PRASA-operated wastewater treatment plants in Puerto Rico. (Links direct to individual facility data pages):
Return to the US Treatment Plant Directory Main Page
Professionals working or looking to bid on projects in Puerto Rico’s water sector should connect with the following organizations and portals:
Currently, PRASA operates 51 wastewater treatment plants across the island, representing a consolidation from over 60 plants to improve operational efficiency and regulatory compliance.
Unlike mainland US states with municipal utilities, all public water and wastewater infrastructure in Puerto Rico is centrally managed by the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA/AAA).
The top five largest plants by capacity are the Puerto Nuevo RWWTP (72 MGD), Bayamón RWWTP (60 MGD), Carolina RWWTP (45 MGD), Mayagüez RWWTP (28 MGD), and Barceloneta RWWTP (15 MGD).
PRASA’s $6.1 billion CIP is funded heavily by FEMA (Public Assistance and 428 Alternative Procedures), HUD CDBG-DR funds, EPA Clean Water State Revolving Funds (CWSRF), and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (IIJA).
The largest coastal plants (Puerto Nuevo, Bayamón, Carolina) operate under EPA Section 301(h) waivers, which permit advanced primary treatment (CEPT) accompanied by discharge through highly engineered deep-ocean outfall diffusers, provided marine water quality standards are met.
Virtually the entire PRASA wastewater system operates under an island-wide EPA Consent Decree (modified in 2015), which dictates mandatory upgrade schedules, maintenance requirements, and SSO elimination milestones for plants and collection systems.
Common technologies include Chemically Enhanced Primary Treatment (CEPT) for coastal plants, conventional activated sludge for inland plants, extensive deep-sea outfall diffusers, and an increasing reliance on microgrids and robust diesel bypass pumping systems for hurricane resiliency.
PRASA is utilizing billions in FEMA funding to elevate critical electrical panels above flood lines, install dual-feed power systems, deploy permanent multi-megawatt backup generators, and harden structures against Category 5 wind loads.