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Your morning shower stops leaving your skin tight and itchy. The orange stains around your toilet and tub disappear without scrubbing every weekend. Your coffee tastes better because the water going into it doesn’t have that metallic edge or chlorine aftertaste.
Whole home carbon filters and water softener combinations protect your appliances from the mineral buildup that shortens their lifespan by up to 30%. Your water heater isn’t fighting scale deposits. Your dishwasher and washing machine run cleaner, longer.
You stop buying cases of bottled water because what comes out of your tap is actually drinkable. Ice cubes are clear instead of cloudy. Guests don’t wrinkle their nose when they fill a glass at your sink.
Multi-stage sediment filtration catches what municipal treatment misses and what well water brings up from the ground. You’re not wondering what’s in your water anymore because you’ve had it tested and you know exactly what’s being removed.
We have an A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau, five-star reviews, and zero complaints. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association and can service every major water treatment brand, not just the ones we sell.
Kendrick homeowners deal with specific water problems. Lake County sits on limestone aquifers that push hardness levels between 100 and 300 PPM. Iron staining is common. Private wells often have sulfur issues. We’ve seen it all and we know how to fix it.
When national companies sell a system and disappear, we’re still here answering calls and maintaining equipment. We’re not the cheapest option in Central Florida, and that’s intentional. You’re paying for laboratory-grade water analysis instead of a sales pitch disguised as a free test. You’re getting equipment that lasts and service that doesn’t vanish after installation.
We start with actual water testing. Not a quick dip-strip that tells you nothing useful, but lab analysis that identifies specific contaminants, hardness levels, iron content, pH balance, and anything else affecting your water quality.
Once we know what’s in your water, we recommend a point-of-entry system designed for those exact problems. If you have hard water and iron, you need different treatment than someone dealing with sulfur and sediment. Filter media backwashing systems handle different issues than carbon filtration alone.
Installation happens at your main water line before it branches to your house. Everything downstream gets treated water. Every shower, every faucet, every appliance. The system is sized for your home’s water usage and plumbing setup.
After installation, you’re not on your own. We schedule maintenance, replace filters when needed, and handle service calls. When something needs attention, you call the same company that installed it. We don’t sell systems and disappear.
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A whole house water filter in Kendrick, FL means treating water at the point of entry before it reaches your plumbing. Multi-stage sediment filtration removes particles, rust, and debris. Whole home carbon filters eliminate chlorine taste, odors, and chemical contaminants. Water softener combinations handle the hard water that’s standard across Lake County.
Florida’s average water hardness sits at 216 PPM, which is considered extremely hard. Kendrick falls right in that range. Without treatment, you’re looking at scale buildup in pipes, reduced appliance efficiency, higher energy bills, and constant cleaning to manage mineral deposits.
Iron removal systems target the orange and brown staining that shows up on fixtures, in laundry, and around drains. Sulfur filtration handles the rotten egg smell that makes well water unbearable. These aren’t cosmetic fixes. Iron damages plumbing over time. Sulfur makes water unusable for drinking and cooking.
Systems are customized based on your water test results and household size. A family of four uses different volumes than a couple or a larger household. Flow rates matter. Tank sizes matter. Filter media needs to match the contaminants you’re removing.
We also offer the $500 military and first responder discount because the people serving this community shouldn’t pay full price for clean water.
Most whole house systems in Kendrick, FL run between $2,000 and $6,000 depending on what you’re treating and the size of your home. A basic sediment and carbon filter for a smaller home with decent municipal water costs less than a multi-stage system handling hard water, iron, and sulfur for a larger property on well water.
The upfront cost feels significant until you factor in what you’re already spending. Bottled water runs $50 to $100 monthly for most families. Appliance repairs and early replacements from hard water damage cost hundreds to thousands. Cleaning products to fight stains and buildup add up. Most homeowners save $600 to $1,200 annually after installation.
Financing options exist if paying upfront doesn’t work. Spreading payments over time means you’re not choosing between the system you need and the system you can afford right now. You get clean water immediately instead of waiting until you’ve saved enough.
A water softener removes hardness minerals like calcium and magnesium through an ion exchange process. It stops scale buildup in pipes and appliances, makes soap lather better, and eliminates that sticky feeling on your skin after showering. It doesn’t remove chlorine, sediment, or other contaminants.
A whole house filter removes particles, chemicals, chlorine, and depending on the media used, can target iron, sulfur, and other specific issues. It improves taste and odor but doesn’t address hardness.
Most Kendrick homes need both. Lake County water is hard enough that a filter alone won’t protect your appliances or stop mineral buildup. But a softener alone won’t remove the chlorine taste or sediment. A water softener combination system handles hardness and filtration together at the point of entry, giving you comprehensive treatment in one setup.
Sediment filters typically need replacement every three to six months depending on your water quality and usage. If you’re on well water with high sediment, you’ll replace them more frequently than someone on treated municipal water.
Carbon filters last six months to a year in most applications. They’re removing chlorine, chemicals, and organic compounds, and once the carbon media is saturated, it stops being effective. You’ll notice taste and odor returning when it’s time for a change.
Water softeners need salt refills regularly, usually every four to eight weeks based on your hardness level and water consumption. The resin bed that does the actual softening lasts years but eventually needs replacement.
Filter media backwashing systems require less frequent attention because they clean themselves, but the media still degrades over time. Iron filters might need media replacement every few years. We schedule maintenance reminders and handle service calls so you’re not tracking dates yourself.
Standard carbon filtration reduces some PFAS compounds but not all of them, and not to the levels you’d want if testing shows significant contamination. More than eight million Florida residents have PFAS exposure above health guidelines, and Lake County is one of the areas with documented issues.
Reverse osmosis removes 99% of PFAS and other contaminants, but it’s typically installed under the sink for drinking and cooking water rather than as a whole house solution. Running your entire home’s water through RO isn’t practical for most properties due to flow rate limitations and waste water production.
The right approach depends on your water test results. If PFAS shows up in your lab analysis, we’ll recommend point-of-use RO for drinking water and appropriate whole house filtration for everything else. If your main issues are hardness, iron, chlorine, and sediment, a standard point-of-entry system handles those effectively without the complexity of treating for PFAS at every tap.
Technically possible if you have plumbing experience, the right tools, and you’re comfortable working on your main water line. Realistically, most homeowners shouldn’t attempt it.
You’re cutting into the main supply line that feeds your entire house. If something goes wrong, you’ve got water everywhere and no way to use any plumbing until it’s fixed. Sizing the system incorrectly means inadequate flow rates or pressure drops that affect your whole house. Installing backwashing systems requires electrical connections and drain lines in addition to plumbing.
Permits might be required in Kendrick depending on the scope of work. Professional installation includes proper sizing, code compliance, pressure testing, and warranty protection. If the system fails because of installation errors, manufacturer warranties often don’t cover it.
The bigger issue is water testing. Without lab analysis, you’re guessing at what filtration media and treatment approach you need. You might install a system that doesn’t address your actual water problems, which means you’ve spent money and time on equipment that doesn’t fix anything.
Please provide your email address so that we can stay in touch and answer any questions you have! We will be reaching back out shortly.
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