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Most people start with a pitcher filter or an under-sink unit and call it done. The problem is that filtered drinking water is only part of the picture. The chloramine in your Palm Beach County tap water doesn’t just affect what you drink — it’s in the steam you breathe in the shower, the water running through your laundry, and the supply line feeding your water heater. Our point of entry systems handle all of it at once, before it ever branches off to the rest of the house.
For homes in Lake Belvedere Estates and the surrounding unincorporated county area, this matters more than most people realize. The housing stock here is predominantly from the 1980s and 1990s, which means pipes and appliances that have been running Palm Beach County’s hard, mineral-heavy water for three to four decades. Scale buildup from that mineral content quietly degrades water heater efficiency, shortens appliance life, and leaves the kind of permanent deposits on fixtures that no cleaning product fully removes.
A whole house filtration system doesn’t just improve the taste of your water. It stops the slow, ongoing damage that hard water and disinfection byproducts cause to everything connected to your plumbing — and it does it from a single point, the moment water enters your home.
We’ve been in the water treatment business for more than 50 years, and we’ve spent much of that time serving homeowners across unincorporated Palm Beach County, including Belvedere and the surrounding communities. That track record doesn’t happen by accident — it happens because we actually follow through after the installation, not just before it. Our BBB A-rating with zero complaints on file is a public record anyone can verify, and in an industry with a well-documented history of high-pressure sales tactics and post-sale disappearing acts, that record is worth paying attention to.
We’re also a Water Quality Association member, which means we operate under a published code of professional ethics — something a lot of local and regional operators simply aren’t held to. We know what’s in the Biscayne Aquifer. We know how PBCWUD treats it. And we know what it takes to protect a Belvedere home from it.
It starts with a water test — not a theatrical demonstration designed to alarm you, but an actual test of your specific water to document what’s present and at what levels. For Belvedere homeowners on the Palm Beach County Water Utilities system, that typically means testing for PFAS, trihalomethanes, haloacetic acids, and mineral hardness, since all of these are documented concerns for this water supply. The test results determine what your system needs to actually address, rather than what sounds good in a sales pitch.
From there, we specify and size a system for your home. Point of entry installation means connecting the filtration system to your main water supply line — the single point where all water enters the house — so that every downstream tap, shower, fixture, and appliance receives treated water. Because Belvedere is unincorporated Palm Beach County, installation permitting falls under county jurisdiction rather than a city building department, and we handle that process with the experience of a company that has been navigating Florida permitting requirements for decades.
After installation, the system runs quietly in the background. There’s no daily maintenance on your end. Filter media is replaced on a scheduled basis, and because we service what we install, that follow-through is part of the relationship — not an afterthought.
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Our whole house systems are multi-stage filtration setups, not single-cartridge fixes. The stages are configured based on what your water test shows — but for most homes in the Lake Belvedere Estates area, that means addressing sediment, chloramine and its disinfection byproducts, PFAS, and the hard water minerals that come with the limestone geology underlying Palm Beach County’s water supply. Each stage targets something specific, and together they handle the full range of what’s coming through your main line.
Chlorine and chloramine removal is handled at the whole-house level, which means cleaner-smelling water from every tap and significantly less chemical exposure in the shower — where absorption through skin and inhalation of steam adds up faster than most people expect. Hard water treatment protects the plumbing and appliances in your home, which is particularly relevant for the 1980s and 1990s-era homes common in this part of unincorporated Palm Beach County. If your water heater, dishwasher, or washing machine has been running on untreated hard water for years, the difference after installation is measurable.
If you’re an active military member, a veteran, or a first responder serving Palm Beach County, we offer a $500 discount on your system. That’s not a footnote — it’s a real reduction on a real investment, and it’s available because we believe the people who serve this community deserve clean water in their homes.
Yes — Palm Beach County Water Utilities has confirmed PFAS detection in its system. PFAS, sometimes called “forever chemicals,” are a group of synthetic compounds linked to various cancers and other serious health conditions. In April 2024, the EPA set its first-ever national drinking water standards for PFAS, establishing a maximum contaminant level of 4 parts per trillion for PFOA and PFOS — an acknowledgment that even trace concentrations carry real health risk.
For Belvedere homeowners served by PBCWUD, this isn’t a distant national story. It’s a documented, local water quality concern. A properly configured whole house multi-stage filtration system can address PFAS at the point of entry, before it reaches any tap or appliance in your home. The first step is a water test to confirm what’s actually present in your specific supply — that’s where any honest recommendation has to start.
PFAS is the most recently publicized concern, but it’s not the only one. Palm Beach County Water Utilities uses chloramine — a combination of chlorine and ammonia — as its standard disinfectant year-round, switching to chlorine-only twice a year to clean the distribution pipes. Both methods produce disinfection byproducts when they react with naturally occurring organic matter in the source water. The main ones are trihalomethanes (TTHMs) and haloacetic acids (HAAs), both classified as probable carcinogens and both found in PBCWUD water at levels that exceed EWG’s independent health-based guidelines — even though they meet federal legal minimums.
Beyond disinfection byproducts, Palm Beach County’s limestone geology contributes to naturally hard water with elevated mineral content. Hard water isn’t a health issue, but it’s a real financial one: it builds up in pipes, degrades appliances, and reduces water heater efficiency over time. For homes in Lake Belvedere Estates that were built in the 1980s and 1990s, that’s decades of accumulated mineral impact that a whole house system can stop going forward.
This is one of the most common concerns homeowners raise, and it’s a fair one — especially for homes with aging plumbing. The honest answer is that a properly sized system installed by an experienced technician should not cause a noticeable drop in water pressure under normal household use. The key word is “properly sized.” A system that’s undersized for your home’s flow rate or incorrectly installed can restrict pressure, which is why the sizing conversation matters before anything gets recommended.
For homes in the Lake Belvedere Estates area, where the housing stock is predominantly from the 1980s and 1990s, the plumbing configuration and pipe diameter are factors that we assess before installation. We’ve been doing this in Florida for more than 50 years, which means we’ve worked in homes exactly like yours. If there’s a pressure consideration specific to your setup, we’ll identify it during the evaluation — not after the system is already in the ground.
An under-sink filter treats the water coming out of one specific faucet — usually the kitchen sink. That’s useful for drinking water, but it leaves everything else in the house completely untreated. Your shower water, your laundry water, the supply line to your dishwasher and washing machine, the water your water heater is heating — none of that passes through an under-sink unit.
Our whole house point of entry systems are installed at the main water line, before it splits off to any fixture or appliance. Every drop of water that enters your home goes through the filtration system first. That means the chloramine that would otherwise be absorbed through your skin in a 10-minute shower gets addressed. The hard water minerals that would otherwise scale up your water heater get addressed. The disinfection byproducts that become airborne steam in an enclosed bathroom get addressed. For Palm Beach County homeowners dealing with a water supply that has documented concerns at multiple levels, treating only the kitchen tap is a partial solution to a whole-house problem.
The cost depends on what your water test shows and what your home actually needs — but for a multi-stage whole house system in Palm Beach County, most homeowners are looking at an investment in the range of a few hundred to several thousand dollars depending on system complexity, home size, and the specific contaminants being addressed. That range is wide because the right answer for a 1,200-square-foot home in Lake Belvedere Estates with moderate hardness and chloramine concerns looks different from the right answer for a larger home with confirmed PFAS and significant scale buildup.
What’s worth putting in context is the alternative cost. A family spending $70 a month on bottled water is spending $840 a year — and $8,400 over a decade. That doesn’t count the cost of a water heater replacement caused by scale damage, which runs $800 to $1,500 or more. A whole house system isn’t an extra expense layered on top of your existing spending. For most households, it replaces ongoing costs while also protecting appliances that are expensive to repair or replace. If you’re a veteran, active military, or first responder, the $500 discount we offer applies directly to your system cost.
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