Agriculture is an essential economic activity in Brazil. However, it is also the main source of water quality degradation.Monitoring catchments with agricultural land use is a way to generate information on a scale to identify causes and sources of water quality degradation. This work used monitoring data derived from hydrology and the quality of surface and underground water in an intensive agricultural catchment in the Atlantic Forest biome. The Fortaleza River catchment is located in the western part of Santa Catarina state in southern Brazil and has 62 km² of drainage area. Hydrological and water quality monitoring was conducted for seven years at two uviometric stations, three lysimeters, one meteorological station and one piezometer. Data on precipitation, temperature, water ow, surface runoff, drainage, and water quality were used. Statistical analyses were also developed. Precipitation between 2013 and 2019 presented a homogeneous distribution in monthly and annual data, with January and July the months with the highest and lowest values, respectively. Statistical difference in the average and Q 95 ows was found in upstream and downstream uviometric sections. In terms of quality, statistical differences were identi ed for ammonium, nitrate and potassium concentrations, which had higher concentrations in lysimeter runoff, indicating direct in uence of agricultural activity on water quality.Principal component analysis (PCA) indicated that (i) surface water presented a positive relationship in Component 1 for the magnesium-calcium, sulphate-chloride and acetate-bromide groups and a negative relationship for phosphate-nitrate; (ii) in lysimeters, the positive relationship occurred for Component 2 for the phosphate-chloride and sulphate-nitrate groups and was negative for ammonium-lithium and calcium-potassium-magnesium; and (iii) in piezometer, positive relationships were found for chloride-sodium and phosphate-nitrite pairs, while negative relationships were found for calcium-magnesium.