Filtration, softening, and treatment systems for private well water and municipal water supplies alike.
Whether your home draws from a private well or the public water supply, water quality can vary block to block. Hardness, iron, sediment, and chlorine taste or odor are among the most common complaints we hear across Hartford and Litchfield County — and most are fixable with the right treatment system.
Sized and matched to your home's actual water quality and usage, not a one-size-fits-all unit.
From new installations to repairing a softener that's stopped regenerating properly, we service all major brands.
Iron and sediment are two of the most common private-well issues in our service area, and both are treatable with the right filtration setup.
Homes on public water supply often still want better-tasting water and softer water for fixtures and appliances — we install systems built for municipal-water conditions specifically.
When a treatment or storage tank ages out, we replace it as part of keeping your whole system working the way it should.
Untreated water quality issues don't just affect taste — hard water and sediment shorten the life of your water heater and plumbing fixtures, while chlorine and mineral content can affect skin, hair, and the appliances you use every day. A properly sized treatment system protects the rest of your home's plumbing investment.
We test before we recommend anything, and we'll tell you plainly if your existing system just needs a repair rather than a full replacement. That's been our approach for 30 years across Hartford and Litchfield County.
Do I need a water softener if I'm on well water?
Many private wells in Hartford and Litchfield County have hard water with high mineral content, which is why softeners are common on well systems. We can test your water and recommend a system sized correctly for your household.
What's the difference between a water softener and a whole-house filter?
A softener specifically removes hardness minerals (calcium and magnesium), while a whole-house filter targets sediment, chlorine, odor, or other contaminants. Many homes benefit from both working together.
How do I know if my water treatment system needs replacing?
Signs include declining water pressure, a return of hardness or odor issues after the system previously fixed them, visible rust or leaks on the unit, or a system older than 10 to 15 years. We can inspect your current setup and tell you honestly whether it needs repair or replacement.
Can you treat iron and sulfur odor in well water?
Yes. Iron and sulfur odor are two of the most common private-well issues we treat, using filtration systems matched to your water's specific mineral content.
Do you service municipal water treatment too?
Yes. Even homes on public water supply often want filtration for chlorine taste and odor, or a softener for hardness. We service both well-based and municipal-water treatment systems throughout our coverage area.
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