Whole-House Water Filter in Falfurrias, TX
Hot semi-arid South Texas climate.
For whole-house water filter, the service area covers roughly 40 miles from central Falfurrias.
Common reasons to call
- Water coming out of every tap smells like chlorine or has an odd taste
- Sediment, sand, or rust is showing up in the water after storms or from a well
- Hard water is leaving scale and spots on fixtures and glassware
- Owner wants cleaner water at every faucet, not just the kitchen sink
- An old filter system has stopped working or is leaking and needs looking at
- New homeowner wants water tested and a system sized before moving in
- Well water needs treatment for iron, sulfur smell, or bacteria concerns
- City water has a strong chemical taste the family wants reduced
Typical work
- Testing the incoming water and recommending the right filter type and size
- Installing a point-of-entry filter on the main line where water comes into the home
- Setting up a sediment pre-filter ahead of a softener or carbon tank
- Swapping filter cartridges or media and flushing the system
- Adding a carbon tank to cut chlorine, chloramine, taste, and odor
- Fixing leaks, bypass valves, or fittings on an existing whole-house system
- Sizing and plumbing a system for well water with iron or sulfur issues
Typical turnaround
Most standard installs are finished in a day; a water test may come back sooner or take a few days if sent to a lab, and larger multi-stage jobs can run longer.
Materials and equipment
- Whole-house filter housing or tank
- Sediment pre-filter cartridges
- Activated carbon media or catalytic carbon
- Bypass valve and shutoff valves
- Copper, PEX, or CPVC pipe and fittings
- Pressure gauge
- Drain line for backwash systems
- Mounting bracket and hardware
Job sizes
Minor
A quick visit like a cartridge or media swap, a flush, or a small leak fix on a system that is already in place.
Standard
A typical whole-house filter installed on the main line, including basic water testing, sizing, and tying into existing plumbing.
Major
A larger job with several stages, such as a sediment pre-filter plus a carbon tank plus a softener, or well water that needs added treatment and a drain line.
Replacement
Removing a failed or outdated system and installing a full new setup, often with new valves, fittings, and a re-plumbed connection.
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓A good pro tests your water before recommending a system instead of selling one size for every home
- ✓They size the filter to your home so you keep good water pressure at every tap
- ✓The main-line connection is done by a licensed Texas plumber and meets local code
- ✓They explain what the system removes and, just as important, what it does not
- ✓They give you a clear filter or media change schedule and show you any upkeep you can do yourself
- ✓They treat well water and city water differently, since the two often need different setups
- ✓They walk you through the bypass valve so you can shut the system off if there is ever a problem
Licensed Texas plumber for the water-supply tie-in; many pros also carry Water Quality Association (WQA) certification, manufacturer install training, and general liability insurance. Ask for the license number and proof of insurance before work starts.
Common questions
What does a whole-house water filter actually do?
It treats water where the main line enters the home, so every tap, shower, and appliance gets filtered water instead of just one faucet. What it removes depends on the type you pick, such as sediment, chlorine, taste, and odor.
Is a whole-house filter the same as a water softener?
No. A filter reduces things like sediment, chlorine, taste, and smell. A softener handles hard water minerals that cause scale. Many homes in this area use both together, since Coastal Bend water is often hard.
Do I need a licensed plumber to install one?
Yes, tying into your home water supply is plumbing work, so a licensed Texas plumber should make the connection. Ask for the license number and proof of insurance before the job starts.
Should I get my water tested first?
Testing is a good idea. It shows what is really in your water so the pro can size and pick the right system instead of guessing. City water and well water often need different setups.
How often do the filters need changing?
It depends on the system and how much water you use. Cartridge filters get swapped more often, while tank systems with media last much longer. A good pro will tell you the schedule for the exact system they install.
Will a whole-house filter help with well water?
It can, but well water may have iron, a sulfur smell, or bacteria concerns that need extra treatment stages. A pro should test the well water and may recommend more than a single filter.
Does a filter lower my water pressure?
A properly sized system should not cause a noticeable drop. Pressure problems usually mean the filter is too small, clogged, or overdue for a change, so ask the pro to size it for your home.
Can I install one myself?
Some homeowners handle simple cartridge swaps, but the main-line tie-in is plumbing work best left to a licensed pro so it meets code and does not leak. Ask what parts of upkeep you can safely do yourself.