Reach Out Today
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.
Hear from Our Customers
Your shower stops smelling like rotten eggs. Your toilets and sinks stay white instead of rust-stained. Your dishes come out of the dishwasher without spots, and your soap actually lathers.
That’s what happens when you install a point-of-entry system designed specifically for Venice’s water. You’re not just filtering out contaminants—you’re protecting every pipe, fixture, and appliance in your home from the minerals and metals that Venice’s aquifer naturally contains.
Your water heater lasts longer. Your washing machine doesn’t work as hard. Your plumbing doesn’t build up scale. And you stop spending money on specialty cleaners trying to scrub away problems that start at the source.
We have over 50 years of experience treating water from the Floridan Aquifer—the same limestone formations causing your sulfur smell and iron stains. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association and hold an A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints.
We’re not a national franchise that sells systems and disappears. We’re Florida-based, and we service what we install. Every system we design starts with a free water analysis of your specific property, because Venice well water varies block to block.
We also support the Tunnels to Towers Foundation and offer a $500 discount to military members and first responders. If you’ve served, we make sure you get a better deal.
We start with a free water analysis at your home. We’re testing for hardness, iron, sulfur, bacteria, and anything else that might be affecting your water quality. This isn’t a sales call—it’s actual testing that tells us what you’re dealing with.
Once we know what’s in your water, we design a system that addresses your specific issues. That might mean multi-stage sediment filtration to catch iron before it oxidizes. It could include a whole home carbon filter to remove sulfur and improve taste. If you have bacterial iron or E. coli, we’ll recommend UV purification that kills organisms without chemicals.
Most systems also include a water softener combination to handle Venice’s hard water, or a salt-free option if you prefer an eco-friendly approach that prevents scale without adding sodium. These systems use filter media backwashing to clean themselves automatically—you’re not manually changing filters every month.
Installation typically takes a day. We connect the system at your main water line so every faucet, shower, toilet, and appliance gets filtered water. Then we test it, show you how it works, and make sure you’re set up for the long term.
Ready to get started?
A whole house water filter in Venice needs to handle more than just sediment. You’re dealing with dissolved minerals from limestone, iron that stains everything it touches, and sulfur that makes your water smell like a swamp.
That’s why most Venice homes need a combination system. You get sediment filtration upfront to catch particles and rust. Then a carbon stage removes chlorine, sulfur, and organic compounds that affect taste and odor. If your water test shows bacteria, we add UV light purification—it kills microorganisms without adding anything to your water.
For hardness, you have two options. Traditional water softeners use salt and ion exchange to remove calcium and magnesium. They’re highly effective and regenerate automatically. Salt-free conditioners don’t remove hardness, but they prevent scale buildup in your pipes and on your fixtures—and they use no electricity and waste no water during backwashing.
Iron removal is critical in Venice. If you have more than 0.3 parts per million, you need a system that can handle it before it oxidizes and stains. We use oxidation filtration or specialized media that captures both ferrous and ferric iron, plus bacterial iron if that’s present in your well.
Every system is sized based on your home’s water usage and your family’s needs. We’re not selling you an oversized system you don’t need or an undersized one that won’t keep up.
Most whole house water filtration systems in Venice run between $2,500 and $5,000 installed, depending on what your water test shows and what size system your home needs. If you only need basic sediment and carbon filtration, you’re on the lower end. If you need iron removal, sulfur treatment, UV purification, and a water softener, you’re looking at a more complete system.
The cost also depends on your water usage. A two-person household uses less water than a family of five, so the system size and media capacity changes. We design systems based on your actual needs, not a one-size-fits-all package.
Keep in mind that a quality system protects your appliances and plumbing. Untreated hard water and iron can cut your water heater’s lifespan in half and increase energy costs by 25% or more. You’re not just paying for filtered water—you’re avoiding expensive repairs and replacements down the road.
Yes, but it depends on the concentration and the type of filtration you use. Sulfur in Venice well water usually comes from hydrogen sulfide gas or sulfur-reducing bacteria in the aquifer. Both create that rotten egg smell, but they require different treatment approaches.
For low to moderate sulfur levels, a whole home carbon filter handles it well. Activated carbon adsorbs hydrogen sulfide and removes the odor before water reaches your faucets. For higher concentrations or bacterial sulfur, you need oxidation filtration or a combination of aeration and carbon.
If bacteria is the source, we also recommend adding UV purification. The ultraviolet light kills sulfur-reducing bacteria and prevents them from producing more hydrogen sulfide in your plumbing. This is common in deeper wells around Venice where anaerobic bacteria thrive in the aquifer.
We test your water first to determine sulfur levels and whether bacteria is present. That tells us exactly which filtration method will work for your situation. Guessing doesn’t fix the problem—testing does.
It depends on the type of system and your water quality, but most whole house filters in Venice don’t require frequent cartridge changes like under-sink units. These are point-of-entry systems designed for high volume and long-term use.
Sediment pre-filters typically need replacement every 6 to 12 months, depending on how much iron and particulate matter is in your water. Carbon filters last 3 to 5 years in most cases. Water softeners and iron filters use media that backwashes automatically to clean itself—you’re just adding salt to the brine tank as needed, usually every few months.
UV bulbs need replacement annually to maintain their bacteria-killing effectiveness, even if they still light up. The bulb loses intensity over time, and that reduces its ability to purify water.
We provide maintenance schedules specific to your system when we install it. Most homeowners in Venice schedule an annual service visit where we check media levels, test water quality, replace any filters due, and make sure everything is running efficiently. It’s straightforward upkeep, not constant maintenance.
No—a whole house water filter prevents new stains from forming, but it doesn’t remove existing stains. Those rust-colored marks on your toilets, sinks, and tubs are oxidized iron that’s already bonded to the porcelain or surface. You’ll need to clean those manually with an iron stain remover or a paste made from baking soda and vinegar.
Once your filtration system is installed and removing iron from your water supply, new stains stop appearing. Your fixtures stay clean as long as the system is working properly. That’s the bigger win—you’re not scrubbing rust stains every week anymore.
If you have iron bacteria in your well, that can create a slimy buildup in toilet tanks and on surfaces. A UV purification system kills the bacteria, but you’ll still need to clean out the existing slime. After that, it won’t come back as long as the UV light is functioning.
The goal is to stop the problem at the source. Filtration handles the incoming water. Cleaning products handle what’s already there. After installation, you’re just maintaining clean fixtures instead of constantly fighting stains.
Probably, yes—if you have hard water. A standard whole house filter removes sediment, chlorine, and some contaminants, but it doesn’t remove the calcium and magnesium that cause hardness. Those minerals pass right through carbon and sediment filters.
Venice water is notoriously hard because of the limestone aquifer. If you’re seeing scale buildup on faucets, white spots on dishes, or soap that doesn’t lather, you have hard water. A filter alone won’t fix that—you need a water softener or a salt-free conditioner in combination with your filtration system.
Most homes in Venice benefit from a combined approach: sediment and carbon filtration to handle particulates, chlorine, sulfur, and taste issues, plus a softener to address hardness. Some systems integrate both into one unit. Others use separate tanks that work in sequence.
If you want to avoid salt, a salt-free conditioner prevents scale without removing hardness minerals. It won’t give you the same slippery feel that softened water has, but it protects your plumbing and appliances from buildup. We test your water and explain which option makes sense for your situation and preferences.
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.
"*" indicates required fields
