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Why Whole Home Point of Entry Reverse Osmosis Water Filtration?

Complete Protection

A point-of-entry system treats all the water that enters your home or facility — not just a single tap. Every shower, faucet, toilet, and appliance receives filtered, purified water, providing comprehensive protection from contaminants found in municipal and well water supplies.

Appliance Protection

Hard water, sediment, and dissolved minerals shorten the lifespan of water heaters, dishwashers, washing machines, and plumbing fixtures. By treating water at the entry point, you protect your entire investment — reducing scale buildup, maintenance costs, and premature appliance failure.

Long Term Value

The upfront investment in a point-of-entry system pays dividends over time. Reduced bottled water costs, fewer appliance repairs, lower energy bills from scale-free water heaters, and extended plumbing life all contribute to meaningful long-term savings for your home or business.

Our Four Stages of Purity

01

Sediment Filtration

The first stage captures sand, dirt, rust, and large particulates that enter from source water or aging pipes, protecting downstream components from premature wear.

02

Carbon Filtration

Activated carbon removes chlorine, chloramines, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and taste and odor issues — delivering cleaner, better-tasting water to the RO membrane.

03

RO Membrane

The reverse osmosis membrane is the heart of the system, filtering down to 0.0001 microns. It removes up to 99.35% of lead, heavy metals, dissolved solids, and other harmful contaminants.

04

Calcite Filter

The final stage re-mineralizes and stabilizes the pH of treated water. Calcite media prevents the treated water from being corrosive to household plumbing and fixtures.

Terms & Definitions

Point of Entry (POE)

A water treatment system installed where the main water supply line enters a home or building, treating all water used on the premises.

TDS (Total Dissolved Solids)

The total concentration of dissolved substances in water, measured in parts per million (ppm). Lower TDS generally indicates purer water.

Reverse Osmosis (RO)

A filtration process that uses a semi-permeable membrane to remove ions, molecules, and larger particles from drinking water.

Rejection Rate

The percentage of contaminants that the RO membrane successfully removes from incoming water. Higher percentages indicate better filtration.

Recovery Rate

The percentage of incoming feed water that is converted into purified product water. The remainder is flushed as concentrate (reject water).

Calcite

A naturally occurring calcium carbonate mineral used in post-filtration to raise the pH of RO-treated water and reduce its corrosive potential.

GPD (Gallons Per Day)

The volume of purified water a system can produce in a 24-hour period under standard testing conditions.

PFAS (Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances)

A group of man-made chemicals known as 'forever chemicals' because they do not break down in the environment or the human body. Linked to serious health risks; effectively removed by reverse osmosis filtration.

Microplastics

Tiny plastic particles less than 5mm in size that have entered water supplies through environmental contamination. Point-of-entry RO systems provide a highly effective barrier against them.

Comprehensive Contaminant Removal

The ability to treat water for the entire home by removing PFAS, microplastics, lead, bacteria, heavy metals, and more.