Better water.
Every tap. Every fixture.
Whole-house filtration installs at the point where water enters your home — treating it before it reaches any sink, shower, appliance, or fixture. One system. Every drop.
Aging infrastructure. Hard water. Your fixtures pay for it.
South Florida’s hard water leaves scale buildup inside water heaters, washing machines, dishwashers, and shower heads — reducing efficiency and shortening equipment life. Older pipe infrastructure in parts of Miami-Dade and Broward can introduce sediment and affect water quality throughout the house. Chloramines added during municipal treatment affect the water in every tap and the air in your shower. Whole-house filtration addresses these problems upstream, not after they’ve already reached your fixtures.
Common South Florida water issues.
Hard water / scale buildup
Calcium and magnesium deposits that damage appliances, clog shower heads, and leave film on dishes and glass.
Chlorine & chloramines
Disinfection byproducts that affect water taste, odor, and can off-gas in showers if untreated.
Sediment
Fine particles from aging pipes or municipal distribution that cause cloudiness and wear on fixtures.
Taste and odor
General off-flavors common in South Florida municipal water, especially in areas farther from treatment plants.
Appliance wear
Hard water accelerates scale buildup inside water heaters and washing machines — filtration protects your investment.
Skin and hair
Many residents notice improvement in skin dryness and hair health after switching to filtered shower water.
Whole-house filtration, answered.
- What's the difference between whole-house filtration and an under-sink system?
- An under-sink or RO system filters water at a single tap — great for drinking water, but it doesn't affect the water in your shower, laundry, or dishwasher. A whole-house system installs at the point of entry — where water enters your home — so every faucet, fixture, and appliance receives filtered water. The two can complement each other: a whole-house filter for general use, plus an under-sink RO for drinking-quality water at the kitchen tap.
- What does a whole-house filter actually remove?
- It depends on the system. A well-configured residential point-of-entry system typically addresses sediment, chlorine and chloramines, taste and odor compounds, and in some configurations, hardness minerals. Some systems include a water softener stage. We'll recommend specific media based on your water test results and what's common in your part of South Florida.
- How much maintenance does a whole-house system need?
- Most residential whole-house systems require filter media replacement every 6–12 months and occasional system inspections. A water softener stage will require salt refills. We offer ongoing maintenance visits so you don't have to manage the schedule yourself.
- Will whole-house filtration affect my water pressure?
- A properly sized and installed system should have minimal impact on pressure. The filter housing is sized to your home's flow requirements. If your home already has low pressure from aging pipes or other causes, we'll account for that when designing the system.
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