Whole House Water Filter in Winter Garden, FL

Stop Hard Water From Destroying Your Home

Point-of-entry systems that filter every drop before it reaches your taps, appliances, and fixtures—protecting what matters most.
A happy woman enjoys a glass of clean, filtered water while standing in a bright kitchen in Lake County, FL, highlighting the benefits of home water purification.

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Water Filtration Systems Winter Garden, FL

What Changes When Your Water Actually Works

Your water heater stops building up scale. Your dishwasher runs cleaner. Your skin doesn’t feel tight after a shower.

That’s what happens when you install a whole home carbon filter with multi-stage sediment filtration. You’re not just filtering water—you’re extending the life of every appliance connected to your plumbing. Most Winter Garden homes deal with moderately hard water around 129 ppm, plus chlorine from city treatment. That combination creates buildup in pipes, leaves spots on dishes, and makes your soap work harder than it should.

A point-of-entry system handles all of it before water enters your home. You’ll taste the difference in your coffee. You’ll see it in your laundry. And you’ll stop replacing appliances years before you should have to.

The result isn’t just cleaner water. It’s fewer service calls, lower utility bills, and appliances that last the way they’re supposed to.

Winter Garden Water Treatment Specialists

A+ Rated With Zero BBB Complaints

We’ve been installing whole house water filters across Central Florida for over five decades. We’re members of the National Water Quality Association, and we hold an A+ Better Business Bureau rating with a 5-star review average and zero complaints.

Winter Garden sits in an area where both city water and well water are common. We’ve tested hundreds of homes here. We know what’s in your water because we’ve seen it, tested it, and fixed it. Whether you’re dealing with chlorine taste from city treatment or iron buildup from a well, we design systems based on your actual water quality—not a one-size-fits-all approach.

We also offer a $500 discount for military members and first responders. And we’re proud supporters of the Tunnels to Towers Foundation, because serving the community means more than just installing equipment.

A person in a blue jumpsuit holds two used, dirty water filter cartridges while crouched in front of an under-sink water filtration system, highlighting the need for maintenance in Lake County, FL.

How Whole House Filtration Works

Here's What Happens From Test to Install

We start with a water test. Not a generic assessment—an actual analysis of what’s in your water. That tells us whether you need a water softener combination system, a carbon filter for chlorine removal, or a more advanced setup for well water with iron or sulfur.

Once we know what we’re dealing with, we design a system that fits your home. Most systems include multi-stage sediment filtration to catch particles, a whole home carbon filter to remove chlorine and odors, and optional softening if your hardness levels justify it. The system installs at your main water line—your point of entry—so every faucet, shower, and appliance gets filtered water.

Installation typically takes a few hours. We connect the system, test pressure and flow, and walk you through how it works. The only ongoing maintenance is replacing the 5-micron sediment filter every six to nine months. Some systems use filter media backwashing to clean themselves automatically, which cuts down on maintenance even further.

After install, you’ll notice the difference immediately. Water tastes better. Soap lathers easier. And your appliances stop working against buildup.

A person installs a new under-sink water filtration system in a kitchen in Lake County, FL, with plumbing tools and components visible around the workspace.

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Whole House Filter Options Winter Garden

What's Included in a Complete System

A complete whole house water filter for a Winter Garden home typically includes a sediment pre-filter, a carbon filtration stage, and optional softening depending on your hardness levels. If you’re on well water, we may add iron or sulfur filtration. If you’re on city water, chlorine and chloramine removal become the priority.

Central Florida water isn’t as aggressive as South Florida, but 129 ppm is still enough to cause scale over time. That’s why most of our systems pair a water softener combination with carbon filtration. You get the mineral protection and the chemical removal in one setup.

We also account for your household size and water usage. A family of four uses water differently than a couple or a multi-generational home. Flow rate matters. So does the size of your main line and whether you have any existing filtration that needs to be removed or integrated.

Every system we install comes with a custom water analysis report, professional installation, and a walkthrough of how to maintain it. You’re not buying a box off a shelf—you’re getting a system designed for your home’s specific water quality and your family’s needs.

A hand holds a glass pitcher under a modern faucet, filling it with clear water. Two clean, white filter cartridges are visible on the counter to the right, emphasizing the purity of the filtered water in Lake County, FL.

How much does a whole house water filter cost in Winter Garden?

Most whole house water filter systems in Winter Garden range from $1,290 to $9,990 depending on what you’re filtering and how much water your home uses. A basic sediment and carbon filter for a smaller home with city water sits on the lower end. A full point-of-entry system with softening, iron removal, and advanced carbon filtration for a larger home or well water sits higher.

The price reflects the equipment, installation, and how customized the system needs to be. If you’re dealing with high hardness, sulfur smell, or iron staining, you’ll need more filtration stages. If your water is relatively clean and you just want to remove chlorine and protect appliances, a simpler setup works.

We don’t sell one-size-fits-all systems. We test your water first, then design around what’s actually in it. That way you’re not overpaying for filtration you don’t need, and you’re not under-filtering and dealing with the same problems six months later.

A whole home carbon filter removes chlorine and chloramines, which are added to city water for disinfection. Carbon filtration is highly effective at eliminating the taste, odor, and skin irritation caused by these chemicals. You’ll notice the difference in your drinking water and your showers.

Hard water requires a different approach. Hardness comes from dissolved calcium and magnesium, which carbon filters don’t remove. That’s where a water softener combination system comes in. The softener handles the minerals, and the carbon filter handles the chlorine. When you pair them, you get water that doesn’t leave scale and doesn’t smell like a pool.

Winter Garden’s water averages around 129 ppm hardness, which is moderate but enough to cause buildup over time. If you’re seeing white spots on dishes, soap scum in the tub, or scale around faucets, you’re dealing with hard water. A combined system addresses both issues at the point of entry, so every tap in your home benefits.

Most whole house systems require a sediment filter change every six to nine months. That’s the 5-micron pre-filter that catches dirt, rust, and particles before they reach the carbon stage. It’s a simple swap—most homeowners do it themselves.

Carbon filters last longer, typically one to three years depending on your water usage and chlorine levels. Some systems use filter media backwashing, which means the system cleans itself automatically by flushing the media with water. That extends the life of the filtration media and reduces how often you need to replace anything.

If your system includes a water softener, you’ll need to add salt periodically—usually every few months depending on your hardness level and household size. We walk you through all of this during installation, and we’re available for service calls if you’d rather have us handle maintenance. The system overall is low-maintenance compared to the cost and hassle of dealing with untreated water.

Point-of-entry systems install at your main water line, filtering all the water that enters your home. Every faucet, shower, toilet, and appliance gets filtered water. That’s what a whole house water filter is—it treats everything.

Point-of-use systems install at a specific location, like under your kitchen sink or on a shower head. They only filter water at that one spot. They’re cheaper and easier to install, but they don’t protect your appliances, and they don’t help with issues like hard water scale in your pipes or water heater.

If you’re dealing with water quality problems that affect your entire home—chlorine taste, hard water buildup, sediment, or odor—a point-of-entry system makes more sense. You’re solving the problem at the source instead of patching it one faucet at a time. For Winter Garden homes with moderate hardness and chlorinated city water, whole house filtration is the more effective long-term solution.

Yes, and well water often needs more filtration than city water. Wells in Central Florida tend to have higher hardness, plus iron, sulfur, and bacteria that city treatment removes. A whole house system for well water typically includes sediment filtration, iron removal, carbon filtration, and softening.

Iron shows up as rust stains on sinks, toilets, and laundry. Sulfur creates a rotten egg smell. Both are common in Winter Garden well water, and both require specific filtration media to remove. We test your well water first to see what’s present, then build a system that handles those specific contaminants.

Well water systems also benefit from filter media backwashing, which keeps the filtration media clean and effective without constant manual maintenance. If you’re on a well and dealing with staining, odor, or hardness, a customized point-of-entry system will handle all of it before water reaches your home’s plumbing.