Volusia-Mamie Lake
- +Two grade letters higher (C → A)
- ++5.2 ft water clarity
- +Lower phosphorus (11 vs 31.4 µg/L)
4 higher-graded lakes within 30 miles, ranked by grade improvement and proximity.
Dias Lake carries a Grade C (Fair) water quality score. Within 30 miles, 4 lakes hold a higher grade. Volusia-Mamie Lake (Volusia County, Grade A, 4.6 mi away) is the closest meaningful upgrade.
Within 30 miles of Dias Lake, 4 water bodies score higher than its Grade C on the same EPA water-quality metrics. That density of cleaner options is itself a signal — when several nearby lakes score better on the same indicators, the issues at Dias Lake are typically lake-specific (depth, watershed inflow, stratification pattern) rather than regional. The choice for a swim, paddle, or fishing trip is genuinely between meaningfully different water bodies, not between marginal differences in the same dataset.
The closest cleaner alternative — Volusia-Mamie Lake in Volusia County, Grade A — sits 4.6 miles from Dias Lake. At that distance, the substitution cost is essentially zero: same drive time, same regional access, demonstrably cleaner water on the EPA indicators. For repeat visitors who care about clarity or phosphorus levels, swapping the routine to Volusia-Mamie Lake is mostly a habit change rather than a logistics change.
The EPA water-quality grading combines clarity (Secchi depth), phosphorus, and chlorophyll-a measurements from state environmental sampling. A higher letter grade reflects measurably cleaner water on those indicators, not subjective beauty or access quality — a Grade A lake might have worse boat-launch facilities or shoreline access than a Grade C neighbor, so the ranking is one input alongside the rest of trip planning. See the methodology page for the full grading formula.
Every lake on LakeQuality has a calculated grade from EPA Water Quality Portal samples — secchi depth, total phosphorus, and chlorophyll-a measured against Metropolitan Council thresholds. To suggest cleaner alternatives, we filter lakes within 30 miles to those with a strictly higher numeric score, then rank by grade improvement with a small proximity tiebreak. Cross-state and limited-data lakes are excluded so the list stays locally relevant.