How Hard Water Affects Your Family's Skin and Hair
While hard water is safe to drink, its mineral content creates issues with personal care. The minerals prevent soap and shampoo from lathering properly, leaving behind a residue on your skin and scalp. This can lead to:
- Dry, itchy skin and aggravated eczema
- Dull, brittle hair that's difficult to manage
- Soap scum buildup on shower doors and fixtures
For families with infants, preparing baby formula with hard water can introduce high levels of minerals that are not ideal for a developing system.
Filtration Solutions for Montgomeryville's Water
With water at 7.4 GPG, you have practical options that don't necessarily require a full, salt-based system.
- Recommended: A salt-free water conditioner is an excellent choice for this hardness level. It prevents scale from forming in your pipes and appliances without adding sodium to your water. Pairing this with a quality pitcher filter or under-sink filter for drinking water is a perfect setup.
- Alternative Option: A traditional whole-house water softener is effective but may be overkill. With potential annual savings of $81, an installed softener (approx. $1,500) would take nearly 18.5 years to pay for itself through energy and soap savings alone. This payback period makes a conditioner a more financially sensible choice for many.
Consider this: the average U.S. family spends over $600 a year on bottled water. An under-sink reverse osmosis (RO) system provides pristine drinking water for a fraction of that cost, eliminating plastic waste.