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You stop seeing white buildup around faucets. Your shower glass stays clearer longer. Soap actually lathers instead of leaving that filmy residue on your skin.
Your dishwasher quits leaving spots on glassware. Your washing machine doesn’t turn whites dingy. Your water heater and appliances last years longer because they’re not fighting mineral deposits every single day.
That’s what a point-of-entry system does. It treats water before it enters your home’s plumbing, so every tap, every shower head, every appliance gets the benefit. You’re not just filtering drinking water—you’re protecting your entire house and everyone in it.
In Sawgrass, where the Floridan Aquifer delivers water with hardness levels that can hit 200+ PPM, a whole house water filter isn’t a luxury. It’s the difference between replacing appliances every few years or getting the full lifespan out of what you paid for.
We’ve been installing whole home carbon filters, salt-free conditioning systems, and multi-stage sediment filtration across Florida for over five decades. 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 do plumbing. We don’t install water heaters. We do one thing: make your water safe, clean, and soft enough that it stops destroying your home.
Sawgrass homeowners deal with specific contamination risks—NDMA, trimethylbenzene, elevated mineral content. We test for those. We design systems around your actual water composition, not some generic solution that works “most of the time.” You get a custom-built filtration system based on lab results and your household’s daily usage.
We’re also proud supporters of the Tunnels to Towers Foundation, and we offer a $500 discount to military members and first responders. If you’ve served, we make sure you’re taken care of.
We start with a water test. Not a guess, not a visual inspection—an actual analysis of what’s in your water supply. That tells us what filtration media you need, what capacity makes sense for your home, and whether you’re dealing with hardness, contaminants, or both.
From there, we design a system. Most Sawgrass homes benefit from a water softener combination setup: sediment pre-filtration to catch particles, a conditioning stage to handle calcium and magnesium, and activated carbon filtration to remove chlorine, chemicals, and odors. If bacteria or organic contamination is present, we add UV purification.
Installation happens at your main water line. The system treats water right as it enters your home, before it splits off to your kitchen, bathrooms, laundry room, or outdoor spigots. That’s why it’s called a point-of-entry system—it’s comprehensive.
Once it’s in, the system runs on its own. Most salt-free models need media replacement every five to seven years. There’s no programming, no salt to haul, no constant maintenance. You just use your water and forget the system’s even there—until you remember what your water used to feel like.
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A whole house water filter for a Sawgrass home typically includes multi-stage sediment filtration to remove dirt, rust, and particulates before they reach your fixtures. You’ll get a conditioning or softening stage that prevents scale buildup without adding sodium to your water. And you’ll have activated carbon filtration that pulls out chlorine, volatile organic compounds, and the chemical taste that makes Florida tap water hard to drink straight.
If your water test shows bacterial contamination or elevated nitrate levels, we add a UV purification stage. That handles waterborne organisms without chemicals, and it works continuously as long as water flows through the system.
Sawgrass sits in an area where hard water is the norm, not the exception. The Floridan Aquifer supplies most of the region, and mineral content here ranges between 100 and 300 PPM depending on your neighborhood. You’ll see it in soap scum, stiff laundry, and the white crust that forms on showerheads. A whole home carbon filter combined with a salt-free conditioner stops that cycle and keeps your plumbing clear.
Filter media backwashing happens automatically in some systems, flushing out trapped sediment so the system stays efficient. Others use replaceable cartridges. We’ll walk you through what your specific setup requires and how often you’ll need service. Most systems run five to twenty years depending on water quality and usage.
Cost depends on your water quality, your home’s size, and what type of filtration you need. A basic sediment and carbon system for a smaller home might start around $2,000 to $3,500 installed. A full point-of-entry system with softening, multi-stage filtration, and UV purification can run $4,000 to $8,000 or more.
That sounds like a lot until you factor in what hard water costs you over time. Appliances wear out faster. Water heaters lose efficiency. You’re buying more soap, more cleaning products, and replacing showerheads and faucet aerators constantly. A quality system pays for itself in appliance longevity and energy savings, usually within five to ten years.
We don’t sell one-size-fits-all packages. After testing your water, we’ll give you an exact price based on what your home actually needs—not what’s easiest for us to install.
A water softener removes hardness minerals—calcium and magnesium—that cause scale buildup. It protects your plumbing and appliances, but it doesn’t filter out contaminants like chlorine, sediment, or chemicals. You get softer water, but not necessarily cleaner water.
A whole house water filter removes particles, chemicals, chlorine, and sometimes bacteria depending on the system. It improves taste and safety, but it doesn’t address hardness. Your water might taste better, but you’ll still get scale on your fixtures.
That’s why most Sawgrass homes need both. A water softener combination system handles hardness and filtration in one setup. You’re treating the minerals and the contaminants at the same time, so your water is soft, clean, and safe at every faucet.
Salt-free conditioning systems need the least maintenance—usually just a media change every five to seven years. There are no moving parts, no electrical components, and no regeneration cycles to monitor. You’re basically set until the crystallization media wears out.
Carbon filters need replacement based on usage and water quality. For most homes, that’s every six to twelve months. Sediment pre-filters might need changing every three to six months if your water has a lot of particulates. UV bulbs last about a year before they lose effectiveness.
We’ll set you up with a maintenance schedule based on your specific system. Some customers handle filter swaps themselves. Others prefer we come out and do it. Either way, you’re not looking at weekly or even monthly tasks—this is low-effort compared to traditional salt-based softeners that need constant refilling and adjustment.
If your water smells like rotten eggs, that’s hydrogen sulfide gas. A standard carbon filter can handle low levels of it, but if the smell is strong, you need a system designed specifically for sulfur reduction. That usually means an oxidation stage before filtration, or a catalytic carbon media that’s built to handle higher concentrations.
In Sawgrass, sulfur isn’t as common as hard water, but it shows up in some well systems and certain pockets of the aquifer. We test for it during the initial water analysis, and if it’s present, we design the system to address it.
The good news is that sulfur treatment works. Once the system’s in place, the smell is gone—not just at your kitchen sink, but in every shower, every toilet, every appliance. You won’t be holding your breath when you turn on the tap.
Technically, yes—if you’re comfortable working with your main water line, cutting into plumbing, and ensuring proper flow rates and pressure. Most homeowners aren’t, and that’s fine. This isn’t an under-the-sink cartridge swap. You’re installing a point-of-entry system that affects every fixture in your house.
If it’s not installed correctly, you risk leaks, pressure drops, or a system that doesn’t filter effectively because the flow rate is off. You also void most manufacturer warranties if the system isn’t installed by a certified professional.
We handle the install, test the system to make sure it’s working at the right capacity, and walk you through how everything operates. You’re not paying for unnecessary labor—you’re paying for a system that works the way it’s supposed to from day one. And if anything ever goes wrong, you’ve got a company that stands behind the work.
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