The Hidden Challenge in Your Water: How Chloramine Impacts Health and Home Filtration Systems
The Hidden Challenge in Your Water: How Chloramine Impacts Health and Home Filtration Systems
Many cities now use chloramine—a mix of chlorine and ammonia—to disinfect drinking water. While it lasts longer than chlorine, it’s harder to remove and can irritate skin, eyes, and lungs. Chloramine may also cause lead to leach from older pipes. For homeowners, it can damage reverse osmosis membranes, shorten carbon filter life, and degrade water softener resin. To protect your health and systems, install a catalytic carbon pre-filter and replace filters regularly. Though chloramine keeps water safe from bacteria, it’s harsh on people and plumbing—making proper filtration essential for long-term clean, healthy water.

The Upgrade Buyers Don’t See (But Absolutely Feel)
Some upgrades show in photos; water upgrades show up in daily life. Better-tasting drinking water, cleaner ice, softer showers, and less scale make a home feel cared for—even if buyers can’t name why. This post explains the “invisible ROI”: fewer appliance repairs, better coffee and cooking, and a calmer routine for kids and guests. Start with an under-sink kitchen system for maximum daily impact, then plan whole-home treatment if hardness is chewing up heaters and fixtures. Take the Water Health Check, then book a Water Health Consult to build a smart upgrade plan that fits your timeline and budget.

3 Families Who Changed Their Water and Never Looked Back
Three families changed their water and never looked back: a renter who started with a shower filter and pitcher, a household that upgraded to an under-sink system, and a homeowner who addressed hardness to protect appliances. This post shares what they noticed first—better taste, easier showers, less scale—and what made it stick: simple routines and the right system level. You’ll get a decision guide (renters vs homeowners), USA-made picks, and a proof test: filtered ice for one week. Take the Water Health Check, then book a Water Health Consult for a plan that fits your family.
