Water in Sa Pa
The dry-season water story in one place — where it comes from, why it runs short, and a live neighbour board of where the water is off right now.
The dry-season water story in one place — where it comes from, why it runs short, and a live neighbour board of where the water is off right now.
Sa Pa's tap water runs short most dry seasons. The original town plant draws from four mountain sources — Thác Bạc, Suối Hồ 1, Suối Hồ 2 and Nhà Pha — and is licensed for about 6,460 m³ a day, but in the dry months only around 3,000 m³ actually reaches taps, against demand of 4,000–6,500 m³. A newer plant (the BOO plant, online since November 2022) added supply, yet shortages still hit.
When your water stops, the useful question is: is it just my tank, or is the whole area dry? Sign in and tap your area to tell your neighbours — and to see where others are reporting no water right now. Reports clear on their own after a few hours, so the board reflects now, not last week.
No water cuts reported right now.
Town centre & market
No reports · Around chợ Sa Pa and the Stone Church
Sun Plaza & the lake
No reports · The central square and lake (hồ Sa Pa)
Cầu Mây
No reports · Cầu Mây street and around
Hàm Rồng
No reports · Below Hàm Rồng mountain
Ô Quý Hồ
No reports · Toward the Ô Quý Hồ pass
Sa Pả
No reports · The former Sa Pả ward area
Phan Si Păng / Fansipan station
No reports · Around the Sun World cable-car station
Sign in to report no water — accounts are free.
How this works
The original plant, run by Lào Cai Water Supply, draws from four streams off the mountains — Thác Bạc, Suối Hồ 1, Suối Hồ 2 and Nhà Pha. Two of them (Nhà Pha and Suối Hồ 1) are largely depleted and the flow at Thác Bạc is falling. Experts blame declining groundwater together with around twenty upstream hydropower projects that hold water back in the dry season. The newer BOO Sa Pa plant (DNP Water), online since November 2022, draws from the Mường Hoa and Vàng streams and added roughly 7,500 m³ a day — but in peak dry spells supply still trails demand.
Dry-season supply ~3,000 m³/day against 4,000–6,500 m³/day of demand
Source: VietnamNet; Báo Lào Cai, checked 15 June 2026.
Runs the original Sa Pa plant and its four mountain sources. No public outage hotline was verifiable when this page was built — official cuts and notices are reported through Báo Lào Cai and the ward (phường Sa Pa) channels.
The newer plant, online since November 2022 (~7,500 m³/day), drawing from the Mường Hoa and Vàng streams.
Drinking water