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.

What I Want My Grandkids to Know About Water
What I want my grandkids to know about water is simple: it’s not just what you drink. It’s what you cook with, what freezes into your ice, and what turns into shower steam. “Safe enough” can still taste off or scale up appliances. This post shares a hopeful path: start with one upgrade you’ll keep—a pitcher or countertop filter—then level up to under-sink or whole-home when you’re ready. You’ll get a checklist and an easy way to involve the family. Take the Water Health Check, then book a Water Health Consult to choose your next step confidently today.
