Whole House Water Filter in Colonialtown South, FL

Clean Water From Every Tap in Your Home

No more rotten egg smell, iron stains, or hard water damage. Just clean, safe water throughout your entire house.
A happy woman enjoys a glass of clean, filtered water while standing in a bright kitchen in Lake County, FL, highlighting the benefits of home water purification.

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Water Filtration Systems in Colonialtown South

What Changes After You Fix Your Water

Your morning shower stops smelling like sulfur. That rotten egg odor from hydrogen sulfide gas is gone—not masked, actually removed at the source.

Your dishes come out of the dishwasher without spots. Your glassware stays clear. Your whites stay white instead of picking up that dingy yellow tint from iron in the water.

Your water heater lasts years longer because it’s not fighting scale buildup every day. Same with your washing machine, dishwasher, and every fixture in your house. Hard water at 7.7 grains per gallon—which is what most Colonialtown South homes deal with—quietly destroys appliances. A whole home carbon filter with water softener combination stops that.

You’re not buying bottled water anymore. You’re not embarrassed when guests use your bathroom and see orange stains in the toilet. You’re not wondering what’s actually in the water your kids are drinking.

Colonialtown South Water Treatment Specialists

We Only Do Water Treatment—And We Do It Right

We specialize in whole house water filtration for Orlando area homes. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association and carry an A+ Better Business Bureau rating with five-star reviews and zero complaints.

We don’t do plumbing. We don’t install water heaters. We focus entirely on point-of-entry systems that treat your water before it reaches a single tap in your house.

Most Colonialtown South homes have moderately hard water, and many deal with iron or sulfur issues whether they’re on well water or city supply. We test first, then recommend the right combination of filtration media, backwashing systems, and treatment stages based on what’s actually in your water—not what we want to sell you.

A person in a blue jumpsuit holds two used, dirty water filter cartridges while crouched in front of an under-sink water filtration system, highlighting the need for maintenance in Lake County, FL.

Whole House Filter Installation Process

Here's What Happens From Start to Finish

We start with water testing. Not just the obvious stuff like hardness or iron—we’re looking for contaminants you can’t see or taste. PFAS, disinfection byproducts, lead, arsenic. Things that matter for your family’s health but don’t show up as a smell or stain.

Once we know what we’re dealing with, we design a multi-stage sediment filtration system that addresses your specific issues. If you’ve got hydrogen sulfide, we’re using media that oxidizes it. If iron is staining your fixtures, we’re removing it before it oxidizes. If hardness is scaling your pipes, we’re softening at the point of entry.

Installation happens at your main water line. Everything gets treated before it splits off to your kitchen, bathrooms, laundry, or outdoor spigots. One system handles your entire house.

After installation, we walk you through maintenance. Some systems backwash automatically. Others need filter media replaced on a schedule. We’re clear about what you’re responsible for and what we handle during service visits.

A person installs a new under-sink water filtration system in a kitchen in Lake County, FL, with plumbing tools and components visible around the workspace.

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Water Filter Options for Orlando Homes

What You're Actually Getting When You Install a System

A whole house water filter in Colonialtown South typically includes sediment pre-filtration, a carbon stage for chlorine and taste issues, and either a softener or specialized media depending on your water test results. If you’re on city water, you’re dealing with chlorine or chloramine that makes everything taste like a pool. If you’re on well water, sulfur and iron are almost guaranteed.

Systems range from basic sediment and carbon setups to comprehensive treatment that combines softening, iron removal, UV sterilization, and reverse osmosis. For homes dealing with multiple issues—hardness, iron, sulfur, and chlorine—you’re looking at $3,000 to $8,000 installed, depending on water volume, treatment stages, and equipment quality.

We don’t use cheap residential-grade equipment that fails in three years. You’re getting commercial-quality components designed for Florida water conditions. That means filter media that actually handles iron without clogging, backwashing valves that don’t break, and tanks that last.

You also get our service commitment. We’re not a national company that sells you a system and disappears. We’re local, we’re members of the National Water Quality Association, and we show up when you need us. We also offer a $500 discount for military members and first responders.

A hand holds a glass pitcher under a modern faucet, filling it with clear water. Two clean, white filter cartridges are visible on the counter to the right, emphasizing the purity of the filtered water in Lake County, FL.

Why does my water smell like rotten eggs, and will a whole house filter fix it?

That smell is hydrogen sulfide gas. It’s not dangerous at typical levels, but it’s awful—especially from hot water. It’s common in Florida well water and shows up in some municipal areas too.

A whole house water filter handles it, but you need the right media. Basic carbon filters don’t touch hydrogen sulfide. You need an oxidizing filter or an aeration system that converts the gas before it reaches your taps.

We test your water first to confirm it’s sulfur and not something else, then install a system designed specifically for hydrogen sulfide removal. The smell is gone from every tap, every shower, every load of laundry.

If you’ve got hard water—and most Colonialtown South homes do—you need softening to prevent scale buildup in pipes and appliances. Orlando area water averages 7.7 grains per gallon, which is moderately hard.

But if you’ve also got chlorine taste, iron staining, or sulfur smell, a softener alone won’t fix it. You need a combination system: multi-stage filtration for contaminants plus softening for hardness.

We test your water and tell you exactly what you need. Some homes only need a softener. Others need a full point-of-entry system with sediment filtration, carbon stages, softening, and specialized media for iron or sulfur. We don’t sell you more than you need, but we also don’t undersell you and leave problems unsolved.

A whole house filter treats all the water entering your home at the main line. Every tap, every shower, every appliance gets filtered water. It handles sediment, chlorine, hardness, iron, sulfur—whatever your water test shows.

Reverse osmosis is usually installed under your kitchen sink. It removes contaminants at a molecular level, including things like PFAS, heavy metals, and dissolved solids. It’s slower and more thorough, but it only treats the water at that one faucet.

Most homes benefit from both: a whole house system for general treatment and appliance protection, plus an RO system at the kitchen sink for drinking and cooking water. If your water test shows PFAS or lead—which are concerns in some Orlando area neighborhoods—RO is the only reliable way to remove them.

A properly designed system removes iron before it oxidizes and stains. Once iron hits oxygen, it turns orange or brown and stains everything it touches—sinks, toilets, laundry, driveways.

The key is treating it at the point of entry with the right filter media. Some systems use oxidizing filters that convert dissolved iron into particles, then trap those particles before they reach your fixtures. Others use water softeners that remove iron along with hardness minerals.

Existing stains won’t disappear, but new stains stop forming immediately after installation. Your whites stay white. Your fixtures stay clean. You’re not scrubbing orange residue out of your toilet every week.

It depends on the system and your water quality. Most whole home carbon filters need media replacement every three to five years. Water softeners need salt refills—usually a bag or two per month depending on household size and water hardness.

Some systems backwash automatically and don’t need much attention beyond occasional media replacement. Others need filter cartridges changed every six to twelve months.

We’re upfront about maintenance during installation. You’ll know exactly what to expect, how often, and what it costs. We also offer service plans if you’d rather have us handle everything. Most homeowners spend $100 to $300 per year on maintenance, which is a fraction of what you’d spend on bottled water or appliance repairs without filtration.