UST Check EPA tank registry · per-address screening

UST Checkcounties → Alaska

Underground storage tanks in Alaska

EPA UST Finder county aggregates for Alaska — registered tank facilities and leak (LUST) incidents as reported by the state program to EPA.

2,597registered facilities
821open tanks
5,902closed tanks
2,099leak incidents
256cleanups still open

By county

CountyFacilitiesOpen tanksClosed tanksLeak incidentsOpen cleanups
Anchorage 964 280 2,072 840 87
Fairbanks North Star 416 154 896 327 67
Kenai Peninsula 266 71 555 200 14
Matanuska-Susitna 202 107 431 164 15
Juneau 97 28 198 76 9
Valdez-Cordova 85 28 186 69 5
Southeast Fairbanks 75 42 193 54 10
Kodiak Island 69 10 186 56 8
Yukon-Koyukuk 59 15 159 50 12
Sitka 56 12 128 31
Ketchikan Gateway 39 10 80 29 1
Denali 36 13 96 36 3
Bethel 30 4 50 16 2
Bristol Bay 25 7 73 17 7
Nome 23 10 46 15 2
Aleutians West 21 0 242 24 1
Prince of Wales-Hyder 18 7 43 11
Dillingham 16 3 28 11 2
Haines 16 3 40 13 1
Petersburg 14 3 31 10 1
Yakutat 13 2 41 2
Aleutians East 12 1 34 7 1
Lake and Peninsula 10 0 25 15 2
Wrangell 10 4 20 9 2
North Slope 8 0 11 3
Hoonah-Angoon 7 6 24 5 1
Northwest Arctic 4 0 5 6 3
Kusilvak 3 0 4 1
Skagway 3 1 5 2

Screen a specific property in Alaska

County numbers set the context; a deal needs the registry around one address — registered tanks at the parcel, facilities within 500/1,500 ft, leak cleanups with status and distance, every line cited to the official record.

Screen an address — $49
This is a screen of EPA-registered tank and leak records, not an environmental site assessment. State registries are incomplete by design: tanks removed before 1986 and most residential heating-oil tanks were never registered, so a clean screen cannot prove the absence of a tank. "Closed" means a tank was taken out of service per the registry — it does not certify that no contamination remains.

source: EPA UST Finder EPA data vintage 2024-12-04