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
When your home sits on a large parcel in Fullerville, your water is doing a lot of traveling before it reaches your tap. It moves through limestone, through soil that has seen decades of cattle ranching and old citrus grove operations, and through an aquifer that no one is monitoring on your behalf. What comes out the other side can carry iron, sulfur, hardness minerals, tannins, and in some agricultural areas of Lake County, traces of Ethylene Di-Bromide a pesticide tied to old grove land that the Florida Department of Health still monitors for in this region.
A reverse osmosis system removes up to 99% of dissolved contaminants at the point where it matters most: your kitchen tap. The difference shows up fast. The sulfur smell that hits you in the shower, the rust-orange staining around your sink drain, the water that tastes like it came from a garden hose those are gone. But the bigger win is the stuff you can’t see or smell. Nitrates from fertilizer runoff, heavy metals, PFAS, and bacteria that can enter an aging well casing after a heavy rain event a properly installed RO system handles all of it.
For homeowners on large parcels in Fullerville who have been buying bottled water because they don’t trust what’s in their well, an under-sink RO system produces cleaner water than most bottled brands at a fraction of the cost per gallon. Your appliances benefit too. Hard water scale quietly destroys water heaters, pressure tanks, and well pumps over time. On a rural property where replacing a pump is a half-day job and not a quick service call, protecting your equipment with proper filtration is the kind of investment that pays for itself before the system is five years old.
Quality Safe Water of Florida LLC is a Lake County-based water treatment company not a national franchise, not a call center routing jobs to subcontractors. Water treatment is the only thing we do. No plumbing, no HVAC, no side services. Just water, done right, from a company that has built its entire reputation on it.
We hold an A-rating with the Better Business Bureau, a 5-star score, and zero complaints on record. That last part is worth pausing on. In an industry where the most common experience is a company that installs a system and becomes unreachable the moment the sale is done, a zero-complaint record is not a small thing. You can verify it yourself at bbb.org before you ever pick up the phone. We are also members of the National Water Quality Association the industry’s professional standards body which means our technicians stay current on the specific water chemistry challenges that come with Florida’s limestone aquifer system, including the conditions common to rural northeastern Lake County and the Fullerville area.
We service every system we install. When your membrane is due, when a filter needs replacing, when something changes in your water we show up. That commitment is why the record looks the way it does.
It starts with a free water analysis not a quick hardness test used to justify a sale, but an actual lab-grade test of what is in your specific well. For properties in the Fullerville area, that means testing for the full range of contaminants relevant to this corridor: iron, sulfur, hardness, pH, tannins, nitrates, and any contaminants tied to the agricultural land use history of northeastern Lake County.
The results drive the recommendation. If your water doesn’t need a particular stage of filtration, you won’t be sold one. Once the test results are in, you get a clear system recommendation matched to your actual water chemistry and your household’s daily demand. For most Fullerville homes on private wells, that means a whole-house purification approach combined with an under-sink reverse osmosis drinking water system one that handles the full load of what the Floridan Aquifer delivers in this part of Lake County.
Installation is handled by our trained technicians who know how to work with private well systems, pressure tanks, and the plumbing configurations common to rural properties on large parcels. Because Fullerville is unincorporated Lake County, there is no municipal permitting authority involved but any work connecting to your main supply line is done in compliance with Florida’s contractor licensing requirements and the Saint Johns River Water Management District’s well system standards.
After installation, you get a walkthrough of the system, a clear maintenance schedule, and a direct line to the same company that installed it. Annual filter changes and a membrane replacement every two to five years are the only ongoing requirements and we handle both.
Ready to get started?
Most reverse osmosis systems on the market are designed with municipal water in mind water that has already been treated, chlorinated, and filtered before it reaches the home. That is not what Fullerville homeowners are working with. Your water comes straight from the Floridan Aquifer, and it carries the full mineral and contaminant profile of a limestone-heavy geology in an agricultural setting.
A system sized and configured for city water will underperform on a private well, and in some cases, it will fail early. We specialize in residential reverse osmosis systems configured specifically for Florida well water conditions. Our highest-value service whole-house purification is what we consider our specialty, and it is the most comprehensive protection available for a rural property like those around Fullerville.
This is not a pitcher filter or a refrigerator cartridge. It is a multi-stage system that removes dissolved solids, heavy metals, sulfur compounds, nitrates, and biological contaminants at the molecular level, with a membrane that operates at 0.0001 microns. Under-sink RO drinking water systems are also available for homeowners who want point-of-use filtration at the kitchen tap without a full whole-house installation.
If you are active military, a veteran, or a first responder, we offer a $500 discount on installation and in a community like Fullerville, where that demographic is well-represented, it is a real number that moves the math. We also support the Tunnels to Towers Foundation, which builds mortgage-free homes for Gold Star and fallen first responder families. That reflects the values we operate by.
If your home is on a private well in Fullerville, there is no municipal treatment system standing between the aquifer and your tap. That means whatever the Floridan Aquifer carries in this part of northeastern Lake County iron, sulfur, hardness minerals, tannins from the organic-rich soils, and potentially nitrates from decades of agricultural use on surrounding parcels comes directly into your home untreated.
A reverse osmosis system is not an upgrade for people who already have decent water. For most Fullerville homeowners, it is the primary filtration layer their property has never had. The only way to know exactly what is in your well is to test it. We provide a free water analysis that tests for the full range of contaminants relevant to this area, including the ones tied to old citrus grove and cattle ranching land use that is common throughout the Fullerville corridor. The test results tell you what you actually need and what you don’t.
The Floridan Aquifer runs through limestone and dolomite geology, which means well water in northeastern Lake County and the Fullerville area is naturally high in calcium, magnesium, iron, and sulfur compounds. Iron shows up as rust-orange staining on sinks, toilets, and laundry. Sulfur produces the rotten egg smell that is common in well water throughout this part of Florida.
Hardness minerals leave scale deposits inside pipes, water heaters, and pressure tanks over time and on a rural property where equipment replacement is a significant expense, that buildup adds up. Beyond the mineral profile, properties around Fullerville sit in an area with a long history of cattle ranching, horse operations, and citrus grove agriculture. That land use history introduces the risk of nitrate contamination from fertilizer applications and, in some areas of Lake County, Ethylene Di-Bromide residues from pesticides used in old grove operations. Tannins from the heavily wooded terrain can also give well water a tea-colored appearance and earthy taste. A reverse osmosis system addresses all of these effectively.
A properly installed reverse osmosis system, sized correctly for your well water chemistry and household demand, typically lasts 15 to 20 years. The system itself is built to run long-term what requires periodic attention are the filters and the membrane. Pre-filters and post-filters generally need to be replaced once a year. The RO membrane, which does the heavy lifting of removing dissolved contaminants, typically lasts two to five years depending on how hard your water is and how much volume the system processes daily.
For Fullerville homeowners on private wells, water chemistry plays a significant role in membrane lifespan. High iron content or elevated hardness can shorten membrane life if the system is not properly configured with the right pre-treatment stages. This is exactly why a water test before installation matters it ensures the system is built for what your well actually produces, not what a generic spec sheet assumes. We size every system based on your specific test results, which protects both the equipment and the investment.
This is a fair concern, especially for homeowners on private wells where the pressure system is self-contained. A standard under-sink reverse osmosis system draws a relatively small volume of water and stores it in a pressurized tank beneath the sink, so the impact on your overall well pressure is minimal during normal household use.
Whole-house RO systems require more careful sizing to ensure the system’s flow rate matches your well’s recovery rate and your household’s peak demand which is another reason the pre-installation water analysis and system sizing process matters. For properties in the Fullerville area with older wells or pressure tanks that are already showing signs of wear, it is worth having both systems evaluated together. Our technicians are familiar with the private well configurations common to large rural parcels in northeastern Lake County and can assess whether any pre-treatment or pressure adjustments are needed before installation. The goal is a system that works with your existing well infrastructure, not against it.
A water softener and a reverse osmosis system do different things, and for most Fullerville homeowners on private wells, they are not interchangeable. A water softener addresses hardness it exchanges calcium and magnesium ions for sodium ions, which prevents scale buildup in pipes and appliances. It does not remove nitrates, sulfur, iron at higher concentrations, tannins, bacteria, heavy metals, or dissolved organic contaminants.
If hardness is your only issue, a softener may be sufficient. But well water in northeastern Lake County rarely has just one issue. A reverse osmosis system filters at the molecular level, removing up to 99% of dissolved solids including the contaminants a softener leaves behind. Many Fullerville homeowners benefit from both a whole-house softener or iron filter to handle the mineral load before the water reaches the RO membrane, and an under-sink RO system to deliver clean drinking water at the tap. We test your water first and recommend the combination that actually fits your conditions, rather than defaulting to the most expensive option or the most commonly sold package.
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
