Homeowner Guide

Whole-Home Filtration vs. Under-Sink RO: A DFW Water Guide

North Texas tap water is safe, but it is very hard, treated with chloramine, and high in dissolved solids. Here is what a whole-home system fixes, what an under-sink reverse osmosis unit fixes, and why most DFW homes end up wanting both.

DFW homeowner drinking clean filtered water in a bright kitchen next to a glass pitcher

What Is Actually in Dallas-Fort Worth Tap Water

Most of the Metroplex draws its water from surface reservoirs like Lake Lewisville, Lake Grapevine, and the Trinity River, then treats it heavily to meet Safe Drinking Water Act standards. It arrives at your meter safe to drink. Three things still drive most homeowner complaints:

  • Very hard water. Calcium and magnesium typically run 7 to 12 grains per gallon across DFW, squarely in the "very hard" range. That is the spotting on your glassware, the scale on faucets, and the shortened life of water heaters and dishwashers.
  • Chloramine disinfection. Dallas, Fort Worth, and most surrounding cities disinfect with chloramine (chlorine combined with ammonia). It is safe, but it carries a taste and odor, and it is harder to filter out than plain chlorine.
  • Elevated dissolved solids (TDS). Total dissolved solids usually land between 300 and 600 mg/L. Not harmful at those levels, but it flattens the taste of drinking water and concentrates into scale when heated.

Trace concerns can also show up at the tap even when the utility meets every standard: lead from older service lines or household plumbing, fluoride added for dental health, occasional nitrate, and very low levels of PFAS. No single device handles all of this, which is the whole point of comparing the two main approaches.

Whole-Home Filtration: Protecting the Whole House

A whole-home (point-of-entry) system treats water where it enters the house, so every tap, shower, and appliance benefits. A typical DFW setup stacks three stages in order:

  • Sediment prefilter. A spun or pleated cartridge catches sand, rust, and silt from older distribution lines before they reach aerators and valves.
  • Catalytic carbon. Standard carbon struggles with chloramine. Catalytic carbon is processed specifically to break chloramine down, protecting both your plumbing and the softener resin downstream. Sized right, the media commonly lasts 3 to 5 years before it needs rebedding.
  • Water softener. An ion-exchange resin swaps the hardness minerals (calcium and magnesium) for sodium, eliminating scale, extending appliance life, and cutting the soap and detergent you need.

What a whole-home system does not do is just as important: it will not meaningfully reduce dissolved solids, lead, fluoride, nitrate, or PFAS at the drinking tap. Softening actually adds a small amount of sodium. Whole-home treatment is about protecting the house and improving how water feels and cleans, not about polishing drinking water.

Under-Sink Reverse Osmosis: The Drinking-Water Specialist

A point-of-use reverse osmosis (RO) system lives under the kitchen sink and feeds a dedicated faucet. It is one of the most effective drinking-water treatments available because it physically pushes water through a membrane that rejects most dissolved contaminants. A common five-stage unit runs:

  • Sediment prefilter to protect the later stages.
  • Carbon block prefilter(s) to strip chlorine and chloramine, which would otherwise destroy the membrane.
  • RO membrane, which rejects 90 to 99% of total dissolved solids along with lead, fluoride, nitrate, and PFAS.
  • Post-carbon polish for a final taste and odor pass.
  • Remineralization (optional but recommended) to add back a little calcium and magnesium so the water tastes crisp instead of flat.

Certified against NSF/ANSI Standard 58, a well-maintained RO system reliably drops lead by more than 98%, fluoride by roughly 90 to 95%, and PFAS by more than 90%. The trade-off is that it only treats the one faucet it serves, and it sends a few gallons of reject water down the drain for every gallon of purified water it makes.

The Honest Answer for Most DFW Homes: Both

Because DFW water is hard, chloraminated, and moderately high in TDS, no single technology solves everything. The practical, cost-aware setup is a hybrid:

  • A whole-home softener plus catalytic carbon to kill scale, protect appliances, and remove chloramine everywhere.
  • An under-sink RO at the kitchen for drinking, cooking, ice, and pet water, fed from the softened line so the membrane lasts longer.

This combination covers the full range of North Texas water problems for far less than a whole-house RO system, and without the heavy water waste a whole-house RO creates.

Homeowner Tip: Match the System to a Real Water Test

Do not buy off a spec sheet. A quick hardness and chloramine test at your tap sizes the softener and carbon correctly and tells you whether an RO remineralization stage is worth it. Undersized equipment regenerates too often and wastes salt. Oversized equipment channels and underperforms. We test before we quote.

Maintenance: What It Actually Takes

Both systems live or die on upkeep. Realistic intervals for a DFW household:

  • RO sediment and carbon prefilters: every 6 to 12 months. Skipping these lets chlorine reach and ruin the membrane.
  • RO membrane: every 2 to 5 years, or sooner if a TDS meter shows rejection dropping below 90%.
  • Whole-home sediment filter: every 3 to 6 months.
  • Catalytic carbon media: rebed every 3 to 5 years.
  • Softener salt: topped off monthly; resin typically lasts 10 to 15 years when protected by upstream carbon.

Installation and Code: The Air Gap Matters

This is where the "compliance" in our name earns its keep. Both softener and RO drains fall under the International Plumbing Code that DFW jurisdictions enforce, and both require a proper air gap so waste water can never siphon back into your drinking supply. A whole-home system needs a bypass valve, a code-compliant drain termination, and a dedicated outlet for the backwash valve. An under-sink RO needs its reject line tied in above the P-trap with an integral or add-on air gap, and a real tee-and-valve feed connection rather than a cheap saddle valve. Most single-family installs do not require a permit, but cutting into the main line or adding a new drain can, and cities like Plano treat potable-piping changes differently. We handle the code details so the install passes and stays safe.

Want the water in your home softened, scale-free, and genuinely clean at the drinking tap? A licensed DFW Master Plumber can test your water and lay out the right combination for your house.

READY TO TALK?

Better water, better health.

Whole-home filtration, softening, and under-sink reverse osmosis, installed and permitted by a Texas Master Plumber.

(817) 670-2530