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Hear from Our Customers
Your shower feels different immediately. Soap lathers the way it’s supposed to. Your skin stops feeling tight and itchy. Your hair actually feels clean instead of coated.
The white crusty buildup on your faucets stops appearing. Your shower doors stay clearer longer. You’re not scrubbing soap scum off tile every weekend.
Your water heater runs more efficiently because it’s not fighting through layers of mineral buildup. Your washing machine doesn’t work as hard. Your dishwasher actually gets dishes clean without leaving spots. These aren’t small conveniences—they’re daily improvements that add up to real time and money saved.
We’re A-rated with the Better Business Bureau with a 5-star rating and zero complaints. That’s not luck—it’s how we operate. We’re also members of the National Water Quality Association, which means our installations meet professional standards, not just “good enough.”
We focus exclusively on water treatment. No plumbing side jobs, no water heaters, no distractions. Just water softening systems, whole-house purification, and filtration for homeowners in Central Florida who are tired of dealing with hard water problems.
If you’re military or a first responder, you get $500 off. We support the Tunnels to Towers Foundation because we believe in backing the people who serve this community.
First, we test your water. Not a guess—actual testing to see what hardness level you’re dealing with. Central Florida water typically runs between 100-300 parts per million because of the limestone in our aquifer, but your home might be different.
Then we calculate the right system size based on your household water usage and hardness levels. Undersized systems don’t work. Oversized systems waste salt and money. We size it correctly the first time.
Installation takes a few hours. We connect the system to your main water line, set it up to meet Florida plumbing codes, and walk you through how it operates. You’ll know how to add salt, how to check if it’s regenerating properly, and who to call if something seems off.
After that, you’re set. We offer salt delivery service if you don’t want to think about it. And if you need maintenance or repairs down the road, we’re the ones who installed it—we know exactly how your system is configured.
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You get a system that’s professionally sized for your home’s specific water chemistry. The Floridan Aquifer supplies most of our water here, and that means limestone, calcium, and magnesium in levels that require treatment. Your system accounts for that.
You get an installation that meets Florida plumbing codes and doesn’t void any warranties on your appliances or water heater. You get a full walkthrough of how the system works, when to add salt, and what regeneration cycles mean.
You also get ongoing support. A lot of national companies install and disappear. We don’t. If your system needs maintenance, repair, or adjustment, we’re local and we know how your setup was configured because we’re the ones who did it.
And if you want salt delivery handled for you, we do that too. One less thing to remember.
If you see white or yellowish buildup on your faucets, showerheads, or around drains, that’s mineral scale from hard water. If your soap doesn’t lather well, or your skin feels tight and itchy after showers, those are signs too.
Burbank pulls water from the same limestone-heavy aquifer that supplies most of Central Florida. That means calcium and magnesium levels are high enough to cause problems. Most homes here test between 100 and 300 parts per million, which is considered moderately hard to very hard.
The easiest way to know for sure is to get your water tested. We can do that and give you the actual numbers. Then you’ll know whether you need a water softener system or if your water is fine as-is.
A water softener removes hardness minerals like calcium and magnesium. It stops scale buildup in your pipes and appliances. It makes soap work better and keeps your skin from feeling dry.
A water filter removes contaminants like chlorine, sediment, or chemicals. It improves taste and smell. Some filters also remove bacteria or heavy metals depending on the type.
They do different jobs. A lot of homeowners end up installing both—a softener to handle hardness and a filter to handle taste or chemical concerns. About 41% of whole-house treatment installations in Florida now include both, because fixing one problem without addressing the other leaves gaps. If you’re not sure which you need, we test your water and recommend based on what’s actually in it.
The main ongoing cost is salt. Depending on your household size and water usage, you’ll go through one to three bags of salt per month. Each bag costs around $6 to $8. So you’re looking at roughly $10 to $25 per month in salt.
Your water softener also uses a small amount of water during regeneration cycles, which is when it cleans itself. That’s usually 50 to 100 gallons every few days, depending on your system size and settings. It’s not a huge increase on your water bill.
Electricity usage is minimal—most systems use about the same amount of power as a digital alarm clock. The real savings come from your appliances lasting longer, your water heater running more efficiently, and using less soap and detergent because soft water lathers properly. Most homeowners see a net savings once you factor in fewer repairs and less product waste.
No. The salt you add to a water softener is used to regenerate the resin beads inside the system—it’s not added directly to your drinking water. What actually happens is an ion exchange: the system swaps hardness minerals (calcium and magnesium) for sodium ions.
The amount of sodium added to your water is very small. For most people, it’s not noticeable in taste. If you’re on a strict low-sodium diet or just prefer not to have any sodium in your drinking water, you can install a separate reverse osmosis system at your kitchen sink for drinking and cooking.
Some people confuse the salt you add to the brine tank with what ends up in the water. They’re not the same thing. The salt stays in the tank and does its job during regeneration. Your water doesn’t taste salty unless something is seriously misconfigured, which doesn’t happen with a proper installation.
A well-maintained water softener typically lasts 15 to 20 years. The resin tank—the part that actually softens the water—can last even longer if you keep up with basic maintenance like adding salt and occasionally cleaning the brine tank.
The control valve is usually the first component that needs attention. Depending on the brand and how hard your water is, you might need to service or replace it after 10 to 15 years. That’s normal wear and tear, not a system failure.
What kills water softeners early is neglect. If you let the salt run out for long periods, or if sediment builds up in the brine tank and nobody cleans it, the system works harder than it should and parts wear out faster. Regular maintenance is simple—keep salt in the tank, check for buildup once a year, and call for service if something seems off. Do that, and your system will last.
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