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
The sulfur smell disappears. That’s usually the first thing people notice, especially if you’ve been dealing with the rotten egg odor every time someone turns on the shower. Guests stop commenting on it, and you stop making excuses.
Your appliances last longer. Water heaters, washing machines, and dishwashers weren’t built to handle Florida’s hard water and high mineral content. A whole home carbon filter combined with a water softener keeps scale from building up inside your equipment, which means fewer repairs and years added to their lifespan.
You’ll use less soap, see fewer stains, and stop scrubbing orange buildup off your toilets and sinks. Your skin and hair feel different after a shower because you’re not rinsing in chlorine and dissolved minerals anymore. And you’re done hauling bottled water home from the store every week.
Quality Safe Water of Florida LLC focuses on one thing: making sure your water is clean, safe, and doesn’t damage your home. We’re A-rated with the Better Business Bureau, hold a 5-star rating with zero complaints, and we’re members of the National Water Quality Association.
We don’t install water heaters. We don’t do plumbing repairs. We test your water, recommend the right filtration system for what’s actually in it, and install equipment that works. If you’re in Mandarin Station, FL or anywhere in the surrounding area, you’re dealing with the same limestone geology and sulfur-heavy well water that most of North Florida deals with. We’ve seen it all, and we know how to fix it.
We also offer a $500 discount for military members and first responders, and we’re proud supporters of the Tunnels to Towers Foundation.
We start with water testing. You can’t pick the right system without knowing what’s in your water, so we test for hardness, iron, sulfur, chlorine, pH, and other contaminants. That tells us whether you need a softener, a multi-stage sediment filtration system, or a combination setup.
Once we know what we’re dealing with, we walk you through your options. For most homes in Mandarin Station, FL, that means a point-of-entry system installed where your water line enters the house. This treats everything before it splits off to your kitchen, bathrooms, and laundry. If you’ve got well water with sulfur and iron, we’ll likely recommend an oxidation stage followed by filter media backwashing to remove the particles.
Installation usually takes a day. We handle the whole thing, test the system when we’re done, and show you how it works. Then we’re available if you need service, media replacement, or have any questions down the road.
Ready to get started?
Most homes in Mandarin Station, FL need more than one type of treatment. If your water smells like sulfur, has visible iron staining, and leaves white buildup on your faucets, you’re dealing with multiple issues. That’s why we install multi-stage systems.
A typical whole house water filter setup includes sediment filtration to catch particles, a carbon filter to remove chlorine and odors, and a water softener to handle hardness. If you’re on well water, we often add an oxidation stage that converts dissolved iron and sulfur into solid particles that can be filtered out. The system backwashes itself periodically to flush out the trapped contaminants and keep everything running clean.
Florida’s geology makes this more complicated than other states. The limestone underground is loaded with minerals, and sulfur bacteria thrive in warm, low-oxygen environments like your well. You’re not imagining it, and it’s not going away on its own. A point-of-entry system handles it at the source so you’re not dealing with it room by room.
We size everything based on your household’s water usage and what’s in your specific water supply. That’s why testing comes first.
A water softener removes hardness, which is calcium and magnesium. It stops scale buildup, makes soap lather better, and protects your appliances. But it doesn’t remove chlorine, sediment, sulfur, or iron.
A whole house water filter handles contaminants like chlorine, odors, and particles, but it doesn’t soften the water. Most homes in Mandarin Station, FL need both because the water here is hard and has other issues on top of that.
That’s why we usually recommend a water softener combination system. You get a multi-stage setup that softens and filters in one installation. It’s more effective than trying to solve each problem separately, and it treats everything before the water reaches any fixture in your home.
If the problem is only about taste or what you’re drinking, a reverse osmosis system under your kitchen sink might be enough. But if you’re seeing stains, smelling sulfur, dealing with scale buildup, or noticing skin irritation after showers, the problem is bigger than your drinking water.
A whole house system treats water at the point of entry, which means every faucet, shower, toilet, and appliance gets filtered water. You’re protecting your water heater, washing machine, and plumbing, not just your drinking glass.
In Mandarin Station, FL, most people dealing with well water or city water with high chlorine levels benefit more from a whole home carbon filter and softener setup. It’s a bigger investment upfront, but it solves the problem everywhere instead of just one tap.
Yes, but only if the system is designed to handle sulfur. That rotten egg smell is hydrogen sulfide gas, and it’s common in well water across North Florida. A basic carbon filter won’t remove it.
You need an oxidation system that converts the hydrogen sulfide into solid sulfur particles, then filters those particles out. We typically use a combination of oxidation, filter media backwashing, and carbon filtration to eliminate the smell completely.
The sulfur bacteria that cause the odor thrive in Florida’s warm, limestone-heavy geology. They live in your well and plumbing, feeding on sulfur compounds in the water. A properly designed point-of-entry system stops them before they reach your house. Once it’s installed, the smell is gone for good as long as the system is maintained.
It depends on the type of system and what’s in your water. Most whole house systems need filter media replacement every few years and periodic backwashing to flush out trapped sediment and contaminants.
If you have a water softener as part of the system, you’ll need to add salt every month or two depending on your water usage and hardness level. Carbon filters typically last 3-5 years before the media needs replacing. Sediment pre-filters might need changing every 6-12 months if your water has a lot of particulates.
We walk you through the maintenance schedule when we install your system, and we’re available for service if you’d rather have us handle it. The key is that a whole home system requires way less ongoing effort than dealing with the damage untreated water causes to your appliances, plumbing, and fixtures.
It depends entirely on what’s in your water and what size system your home needs. A basic whole house carbon filter for city water with chlorine issues might run a few thousand dollars. A multi-stage sediment filtration system with softening and sulfur removal for well water costs more because it’s handling more problems.
We don’t give quotes without testing your water first because recommending the wrong system wastes your money and doesn’t fix the problem. Once we know what we’re dealing with, we’ll give you options that actually work for your situation.
The cost of not treating your water adds up fast. Replacing a water heater every 6-8 years instead of 12-15 costs you $1,200-1,500 each time. Add in the cost of bottled water, extra soap and cleaning supplies, and appliance repairs, and a whole house system usually pays for itself within a few years. Plus, we offer a $500 discount for military members and first responders.
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
