Well Water Filtration in Palmo, FL

Clean Water From Every Tap in Your Home

Stop dealing with rotten egg smells, orange stains, and worries about what’s actually in your water. Get a whole-house system that handles Florida’s toughest well water problems.
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Whole House Water Filtration Systems

What Your Water Should Look Like

Your water shouldn’t smell like sulfur when you turn on the shower. It shouldn’t leave rust stains on your fixtures or make your clothes look dingy after washing. And you definitely shouldn’t wonder if it’s safe for your kids to drink.

When your well water filtration system is doing its job, you notice the difference immediately. No more embarrassment when guests use your bathroom. No more replacing appliances years earlier than you should. No more buying bottled water because you don’t trust what comes out of your tap.

The right system removes iron before it stains your tubs and toilets. It eliminates hydrogen sulfide so your water stops smelling like rotten eggs. It handles bacteria and contaminants that Florida’s limestone aquifers let through. And it does all of this without you thinking about it every single day.

Water Treatment Company in Palmo

We Only Do Water Treatment

We focus exclusively on water purification, softening, and filtration. We don’t do plumbing. We don’t install water heaters. We solve water quality problems, and that’s it.

We’re A-rated by the Better Business Bureau with a 5-star rating and zero complaints. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association. And we’ve built our reputation in Florida by actually servicing what we sell, which apparently isn’t as common as it should be.

Palmo homeowners deal with the same well water issues you’ll find throughout Central Florida. Sandy soil and limestone geology mean sulfur, iron, and bacteria find their way into groundwater easily. We test your specific water chemistry first, then build a system around what’s actually in your well, not what works everywhere else in the country.

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Well Water Treatment Process

Here's What Actually Happens

We start with water testing. Not the kind you buy at the hardware store, but lab analysis that tells us exactly what’s in your water and at what levels. Iron, sulfur, bacteria, pH, hardness, manganese—all of it matters when we’re designing your system.

Once we know what we’re dealing with, we recommend the right treatment method. For iron and sulfur, that’s usually air injection oxidation, which uses oxygen instead of chemicals to remove contaminants. For bacteria, we might use hydrogen peroxide injection or UV disinfection. For hard water, a softener handles the calcium and magnesium that damage your plumbing.

The system gets installed at your main water line, so every tap in your house gets treated water. You’re not filtering just the kitchen sink or just one bathroom. The whole house gets clean water, from the shower to the washing machine to the ice maker.

After installation, the system runs automatically. Most homeowners forget it’s even there until someone mentions how good their water tastes or asks why their house doesn’t have that sulfur smell anymore.

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Iron Removal and Sulfur Treatment

What Your System Actually Removes

A properly designed well water filtration system handles multiple contaminants at once. Iron removal systems take out up to 7 PPM of iron, which stops the orange and brown staining on everything the water touches. Hydrogen sulfide treatment eliminates up to 8 PPM of that rotten egg smell. Manganese removal prevents the black staining that shows up on fixtures.

Air injection oxidation works without chemicals. The system injects air into your water, which oxidizes iron, sulfur, and manganese. Those oxidized particles get filtered out before the water reaches your taps. It’s low-maintenance and doesn’t require you to handle or store chemicals.

For bacteria concerns, hydrogen peroxide injection or UV disinfection kills coliform bacteria, E. coli, and other microorganisms that can make you sick. This matters in Palmo and throughout Florida, where bacteria can enter wells through the porous limestone that supplies most of our groundwater.

Hard water treatment removes the calcium and magnesium that build up in your pipes, water heater, and appliances. Replacing a water heater costs a lot more than installing a water softener that prevents the damage in the first place. Same goes for your washing machine, dishwasher, and every faucet in your house.

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How do I know if my well water needs a filtration system?

If your water smells like rotten eggs, leaves orange or brown stains, tastes metallic, or looks cloudy, you’ve got contamination that needs treatment. But some contaminants don’t have obvious signs.

Bacteria, arsenic, and nitrates can be present at unsafe levels without changing how your water looks, smells, or tastes. That’s why we recommend testing your well water every year for coliform bacteria and nitrates, and every three years for lead and other contaminants.

Florida’s geology makes certain problems more common here than in other states. The limestone aquifers that supply most Palmo wells are rich in sulfur and minerals. Sandy soil allows bacteria and organic material to reach groundwater more easily. If you’re on a well in Central Florida, chances are good you’re dealing with at least one water quality issue.

Air injection oxidation uses oxygen to convert dissolved iron and sulfur into particles that can be filtered out. It’s chemical-free, low-maintenance, and effective for most Florida well water problems.

Chemical treatment uses chlorine, hydrogen peroxide, or potassium permanganate to oxidize contaminants. It works for higher contamination levels or when you’re dealing with iron bacteria, but it requires you to monitor chemical levels and refill tanks periodically.

We prefer air injection for most Palmo homeowners because it handles the typical iron and sulfur levels we see in this area without the hassle of chemical storage or the risk of overuse. It’s a natural process that treats your water effectively without adding anything you’ll need to manage long-term.

Yes, but the treatment method depends on how much hydrogen sulfide is in your water. That rotten egg smell is hydrogen sulfide gas, and it’s one of the most common complaints from Central Florida well owners.

For levels up to 8 PPM, air injection oxidation removes the sulfur effectively. The system injects air into your water, which oxidizes the hydrogen sulfide. The oxidized particles get filtered out, and the smell disappears.

For higher levels or if you have sulfur bacteria in your well, you might need hydrogen peroxide injection or shock chlorination to kill the bacteria first. We test your water to determine exactly what’s causing the smell and what concentration we’re dealing with, then recommend the treatment that’ll actually solve the problem.

System cost depends on what’s in your water and what treatment methods you need. A basic iron and sulfur removal system starts around $3,000 to $5,000 installed. If you need bacteria disinfection, hardness removal, or treatment for multiple contaminants, you’re looking at a more comprehensive system.

Here’s what matters more than the upfront cost: how much you’re spending right now on bottled water, cleaning supplies, and appliance repairs. Most homeowners we work with save over $1,100 per year after installing a whole-house system. They’re not buying bottled water anymore. They’re not replacing water heaters prematurely. They’re not scrubbing iron stains off everything.

We’re not the cheapest option you’ll find, and that’s intentional. You’re investing in a system built with quality media and materials that comes with a limited lifetime warranty. Cheap systems fail, and then you’re paying twice—once for the system that didn’t work, and again for the one that does.

Air injection systems need minimal maintenance. You’ll backwash the filter periodically to remove accumulated iron and sediment, but most systems do this automatically on a timer. You might need to clean the air injector once a year.

Systems that use hydrogen peroxide or other chemicals require more attention. You’ll need to refill chemical tanks and monitor levels to make sure the system is treating your water properly. UV systems need annual bulb replacement.

Water softeners need salt refills every few months, depending on your water hardness and how much water your household uses. The frequency varies, but it’s straightforward—you add salt to the brine tank when it runs low.

We service what we sell, which means if something needs attention, we handle it. A lot of national companies install systems and disappear. We’re local, we’re available, and we make sure your system keeps working the way it should.