How Very Hard Water Affects Your Body
While consuming hard water isn't a direct health hazard, it significantly impacts daily life. The high mineral content prevents soap and shampoo from lathering properly, leaving a residue on your skin and hair.
- Skin & Hair: This can lead to dry, itchy skin, aggravate conditions like eczema, and leave hair feeling brittle and looking dull.
- Bathing: You may notice you don't feel fully clean after a shower due to the soap scum left on your skin.
- Families: For households with infants, using very hard water to prepare baby formula can introduce a high mineral load that may not be ideal.
Filtration Guide for Bloomfield's 25.3 GPG Water
At 25.3 GPG, treating your water isn't a luxury—it's a necessity to protect your home. A simple pitcher filter won't solve the core problem.
- Best Solution: A whole-house water softener is the most effective choice. It treats all water entering your home, protecting every pipe, fixture, and appliance from scale buildup. For purified drinking water, pair it with an under-sink Reverse Osmosis (RO) system.
- The Payback: A whole-house softener (around $1,500 installed) pays for itself in approximately 5.6 years. This comes from real savings of $270 per year on energy, detergents, soaps, and not having to prematurely replace your expensive water heater and dishwasher.
- Salt-Free Alternative: A salt-free water conditioner is an option for those who want to prevent scale without using sodium, but it will not provide the other benefits of softened water, like better lathering and soap efficiency.