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
That rotten egg smell coming from your tap isn’t a fluke. It’s hydrogen sulfide — a naturally occurring gas in the Floridan Aquifer that feeds every home in Bridgeport at Mission Hills through the Central Sumter Utility system. It’s more noticeable in summer when the heat amplifies it, and it doesn’t go away on its own. A properly sized filtration system eliminates it at the point of entry, so every tap in your home runs clean.
The orange staining on your driveway and golf cart path is a separate issue — that’s iron-rich irrigation water from the Sumter Water Conservation Authority’s non-potable system hitting your outdoor surfaces daily. Inside your home, the hard water coming through your pipes is quietly building scale inside your water heater, washing machine, and dishwasher. These aren’t cosmetic problems. They’re appliance killers, and replacement costs add up fast.
When the right system is in place, the smell is gone. The staining stops. Your appliances last longer. Your water tastes like water again. For residents who chose Bridgeport at Mission Hills because they wanted a high-quality lifestyle, that’s what your water should match.
We’ve been working with Florida’s water chemistry for over 50 years — specifically the limestone-filtered groundwater of the Floridan Aquifer that serves communities across Sumter County, including Bridgeport at Mission Hills. That’s not general water treatment experience. That’s decades of solving the exact problems your home is dealing with right now.
We hold an A+ BBB rating, a five-star rating across every major review platform, and zero complaints on record. In an industry where the Florida Attorney General has taken legal action against water filter companies for predatory sales tactics, that track record means something real. We’re also a member of the National Water Quality Association — a voluntary professional credential that requires passing a comprehensive examination and agreeing to a formal code of ethics.
We already have an established presence and reputation serving The Villages area and Bridgeport at Mission Hills specifically. If you’ve been approached by high-pressure water treatment salespeople before, this is a different experience. Our goal is to show you what’s in your water and let you decide what to do about it.
It starts with a free water analysis. Before anything is recommended or quoted, one of our technicians tests your water to identify exactly what’s in it — mineral load, iron content, hydrogen sulfide levels, and any disinfection byproducts like haloacetic acids that form when chlorine treats the Floridan Aquifer’s naturally mineral-rich source water. The EWG database has confirmed detection of these compounds in Central Sumter Utility water, and they’re worth knowing about. The test takes the guesswork out of everything that follows.
Once the results are in, we design a system around your specific water chemistry and your household’s usage — not a generic package pulled off a shelf. For most Bridgeport at Mission Hills homes, that means a combination of whole-house carbon filtration to address disinfection byproducts and chlorine taste, a water softener to handle the hard water load from the limestone aquifer, and in some cases an iron or sulfur-specific treatment stage depending on what the test reveals.
Installation happens in a single day. The system goes in at the point of entry, which means every tap in your home is covered — kitchen, bathrooms, laundry, all of it. No multi-day disruption, no running new plumbing through the house. By the time our crew leaves, your water is already running through the system. We operate fully licensed and insured throughout Florida, and our service doesn’t stop at installation.
Ready to get started?
Most filtration companies design systems for average conditions. The water in Bridgeport at Mission Hills isn’t average — it comes from a limestone aquifer at roughly 250 feet deep, runs through 138 miles of Central Sumter Utility mains, and arrives at your tap carrying dissolved calcium, magnesium, iron, and trace disinfection byproducts. The irrigation water hitting your driveway and outdoor surfaces from the SWCA’s non-potable system adds an iron staining problem on top of that. A system that doesn’t account for both sides of this picture isn’t doing the full job.
We address manganese reduction, iron removal, sulfur smell treatment, bacterial filtration, and hard water — individually or in combination, depending on what your free water test actually shows. For private well water homes in the adjacent Haciendas of Mission Hills area in Leesburg, the picture is different again: no municipal treatment plant between the aquifer and your tap means bacteria, iron, and manganese come through untreated. Those homes typically require a more comprehensive system that includes UV purification for bacterial filtration alongside the mineral and odor treatment stages.
We offer a $500 discount for military and first responders, and it’s a real number at a price point where it matters. We’re also involved with the Tunnels to Towers Foundation — not because it’s good marketing, but because this community has a significant veteran population and those values align. If you’re in Bridgeport at Mission Hills or anywhere in the Mission Hills area, the process starts with one free call and a water test that costs you nothing.
Legally, the Central Sumter Utility meets EPA standards — but that’s a low bar when it comes to what you’re actually drinking. The EWG database has confirmed detection of haloacetic acids in CSU water. These are disinfection byproducts that form when chlorine — used to treat the Floridan Aquifer source water — reacts with naturally occurring organic matter in the water. They’re legally compliant but exceed EWG’s health-based guidelines, and they’ve been linked to cancer risk and adverse pregnancy outcomes in multiple studies.
Beyond the chemistry, the water coming through your pipes in Bridgeport at Mission Hills carries the mineral load of the Floridan Aquifer — high calcium and magnesium that causes hard water scale, iron that affects taste and stains surfaces, and hydrogen sulfide that creates that sulfur smell. The utility treats for safety, not for taste, odor, or long-term appliance protection. That’s the gap a whole-house filtration system fills. A free water test will show you exactly what’s in your specific water so you’re not guessing.
That smell is hydrogen sulfide — a naturally occurring gas dissolved in the Floridan Aquifer groundwater that supplies the entire Villages area, including Bridgeport at Mission Hills. It’s present year-round, but it becomes noticeably stronger in summer because heat amplifies the odor. If you’ve noticed it gets worse from May through September, that’s exactly why.
The important thing to understand is that a standard water softener won’t fix this. Running high hydrogen sulfide levels through a softener’s resin beads will actually foul the media and damage the system over time. Sulfur smell treatment requires a dedicated stage — typically an oxidizing filter or an air injection system — that addresses the hydrogen sulfide before the water reaches your softener or any other point-of-use filter. Getting the sequence right matters, which is why a water test comes before any system recommendation. Once it’s properly treated, the smell is gone completely — not masked, not reduced. Gone.
The orange staining you’re seeing on driveways, golf cart paths, and exterior surfaces in Bridgeport at Mission Hills is almost always caused by the irrigation water — not your indoor potable supply. The Sumter Water Conservation Authority provides non-potable irrigation water to The Villages from the same Floridan Aquifer source, but this water isn’t treated for iron content the way the potable supply is. When iron-rich irrigation water hits concrete, pavers, or any outdoor surface repeatedly, it oxidizes and leaves that characteristic rust-orange stain.
Treating the staining at the source means addressing the iron in your irrigation water supply. This is a separate consideration from your indoor whole-house filtration system, and it requires a different type of iron removal treatment designed for the non-potable irrigation line. We understand the dual-water-system infrastructure specific to The Villages — the distinction between the CSU potable supply and the SWCA irrigation supply — and can assess both sides of the picture during your free water analysis.
For homes in Bridgeport at Mission Hills that are on the Central Sumter Utility system, the water has already passed through a treatment plant before it reaches your tap. That means the primary concerns are what the treatment process leaves behind — disinfection byproducts, residual chlorine taste, hard water minerals, and iron or sulfur from the aquifer source. A whole-house carbon filtration system combined with a water softener handles most of that effectively.
For homes on private wells — which includes some properties in the adjacent Haciendas of Mission Hills area in Leesburg and other areas outside The Villages’ utility boundary — there is no treatment plant in the picture at all. Water comes straight from the Floridan Aquifer to your tap. That means bacteria, iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide come through completely untreated. Private well water filtration in this context typically requires a multi-stage system: sediment pre-filtration, iron and manganese reduction, sulfur treatment, UV purification for bacterial filtration, and often a water softener. The starting point is the same either way — a free water test that tells you exactly what you’re working with.
Installation is a single-day job in most cases. The system installs at the point of entry — where the water line comes into your home — which means there’s no need to run new plumbing through walls or reroute your existing setup. One installation point covers every tap in the house: kitchen, bathrooms, laundry, everything.
For Bridgeport at Mission Hills residents, the practical reality is that our crew arrives, installs the system, tests it, and walks you through how it works — all before they leave. You’re not looking at a multi-day disruption or a home that’s out of commission. The entire process is designed around the fact that you have a life to get back to. We operate fully licensed and insured throughout Florida, and our technicians are familiar with the utility infrastructure and home configurations common to The Villages area. After installation, we’re available for filter replacements, service calls, and annual water retesting — not a company that installs and disappears.
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
