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You stop buying bottled water. Your soap lathers better. Your coffee tastes like coffee, not chlorine. Your water heater isn’t fighting scale buildup every day, and your fixtures aren’t covered in that crusty white film.
That’s what happens when you install a point-of-entry system that treats water before it enters your home. Not just at the kitchen sink—everywhere.
In Killarney, the water coming into your home carries hard minerals, chlorine, iron, and sometimes sulfur. A whole house water filter handles all of it with multi-stage sediment filtration, whole home carbon filters, and depending on your water test, a water softener combination or UV purification. You’re not patching the problem. You’re solving it where it starts.
We’ve been installing and servicing water treatment systems across Florida for over five decades. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association, A-rated with the Better Business Bureau, and we don’t sell systems we won’t service.
We’re local. We test your water first. Then we design a system based on what’s actually in it—not what’s on sale. If you’re in Killarney or Lake County, you’re dealing with Florida water, and we know exactly how to treat it.
We start with a water test. Not a guess—a real analysis of what’s in your water. That tells us if you need iron removal, sulfur filtration, a softener, UV bacteria treatment, or a combination.
Once we know what you’re dealing with, we design a point-of-entry system that treats water as it enters your home. That usually means sediment filtration to catch particles, whole home carbon filters to remove chlorine and odors, and filter media backwashing to keep everything running clean. If you have hard water—and in Killarney, you probably do—we add a water softener combination to handle calcium and magnesium.
We install it at the main line. We test it after installation. And we service it when it needs maintenance. You don’t have to think about it again unless something changes.
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Your system depends on your water test, but here’s what most Killarney homes need. A sediment filter catches dirt, rust, and particles before they reach your fixtures. A whole home carbon filter removes chlorine, improves taste, and eliminates that chemical smell. If you have iron or sulfur bacteria, we add an Iron Clear or Sulfur Clear system that filters rust and kills bacteria like E.coli.
For hard water—which Florida has in abundance—we install a water softener that removes calcium and magnesium without salt or chemicals. It’s eco-friendly, uses no electricity, and prevents scale buildup in your pipes and appliances. If you’re on well water or concerned about bacteria, we add a Purelight UV system that kills waterborne organisms with ultraviolet light.
Everything is custom. We don’t install cookie-cutter systems because your water isn’t the same as your neighbor’s. Lake Killarney has had multiple blue-green algae alerts, and well water in the area can carry iron, sulfur, and bacterial contamination. Your system should address what’s actually in your water—not what works in Orlando or Tampa.
It depends on what’s in your water and what you need filtered. A basic point-of-entry system with sediment and carbon filtration starts around a few thousand dollars. If you add a water softener, iron removal, UV purification, or sulfur treatment, the price goes up.
We don’t give quotes over the phone because your water is different from the house next door. We test it first, then design a system based on the results. That way, you’re not paying for equipment you don’t need or skipping something that would actually solve the problem.
Most Killarney homeowners dealing with hard water, chlorine taste, and iron staining end up in the mid-range. If you’re on well water with bacteria or sulfur issues, expect to invest more. But you’re also protecting appliances that cost thousands to replace and eliminating bottled water expenses that add up fast.
A whole house water filter removes contaminants like chlorine, sediment, iron, sulfur, and bacteria. A water softener removes hardness—the calcium and magnesium that cause scale buildup, soap scum, and appliance damage.
They do different jobs, and most Florida homes need both. Your water can be soft but still taste like chlorine. Or it can be filtered but still leave white spots on your dishes. A water softener combination handles hardness while the filtration system addresses everything else.
In Killarney, hard water is common. The average Florida home has 100-300 PPM of hardness, and Lake County falls right in that range. If you’re seeing buildup around faucets, your soap isn’t lathering, or your water heater is struggling, hardness is the issue. If your water smells like rotten eggs or tastes like a swimming pool, that’s filtration. We test for both and design a system that covers what you actually need.
It depends on the system and your water quality, but most need attention once or twice a year. Sediment filters need replacement when they clog. Carbon filters last longer but eventually lose effectiveness. If you have a backwashing system, the media needs replacement every few years.
Water softeners need salt or potassium refills if they use it, though the eco-friendly systems we install don’t require chemicals. UV systems need bulb replacements annually because the light loses strength over time. Iron and sulfur filters need media replacement depending on how much contamination they’re handling.
We service everything we install, and we also service systems other companies sold and walked away from. If you’re in Killarney and your current system isn’t working right, we’ll come look at it. Most maintenance is straightforward—you’re not rebuilding the system every year. You’re just keeping it running the way it should.
A standard carbon or sediment filter won’t kill bacteria, but a UV purification system will. If your water test shows E.coli, coliform, or other bacteria, you need a Purelight UV system that uses ultraviolet light to eliminate waterborne organisms.
UV treatment is common for well water in Florida because the aquifers are shallow and easily contaminated. Between the porous limestone, high water table, and heavy rainfall, bacteria can get into wells faster than most people realize. Lake Killarney has had algae contamination issues, and well water in the area can carry bacteria even when it looks clear.
The UV system installs after your filtration and softening equipment. Water flows through the chamber, gets exposed to UV light, and bacteria is killed instantly. The bulb needs replacement once a year, but the system itself is low-maintenance and highly effective. If you’re on well water, we test for bacteria first and recommend UV if it’s present.
You could, but it’s not a weekend DIY project. Point-of-entry systems tie into your main water line, which means shutting off water to your entire home, cutting into plumbing, and installing equipment that needs to be sized correctly for your flow rate and pressure.
If you install it wrong, you’ll have leaks, low water pressure, or a system that doesn’t filter properly. If you skip the water test and guess what equipment you need, you’ll waste money on filters that don’t address your actual problem. And if something breaks a year later, you’re troubleshooting it yourself.
We’ve been doing this for 50 years. We test your water, design the system, install it at the main line, and make sure it’s working before we leave. If something goes wrong later, we come back and fix it. Most Killarney homeowners would rather have it done right the first time than deal with a flooded utility room because a fitting wasn’t tightened correctly.
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