When we moved into our home, we had a Rainsoft whole house system installed. It costs us close to $10,000 when it was all said and done, and we paid around $350-400 a year to maintain the system before Biden took office.
Think we paid just under $600 this year to replace all the filters, etc. I would not recommend a whole house system to people living paycheck to paycheck.
We sold our old home and we used some of the profits to fund that purchase. We wouldn't have been able to purchase it otherwise.
One of the benefits of a whole house system we've discovered is that we now use less soap when taking showers and doing laundry.
As an example, I can use a dime size squirt of shampoo and it lathers up better than 3 times as much shampoo did previously.
We also had Rainsoft's Clean Start system installed, which adds oxygen to the cold water line and allows us to wash nearly all of our clothes in cold water. My wife uses 1/4 of the amount of detergent she did before. Laundry detergent is not cheap so those savings are definitely adding up, especially now thanks to Brandon.
RO = Reverse osmosis
Swick! I'll see what I can find fren. Thanks!
You can get a basic kit for drinking water for under $200.
Keep in mind you'll need to replace the filters every year and they're typically $100-150 themselves.
I am not making a recommendation, but here are 5 systems within that price range- https://waterontop.com/reviews/cheap-reverse-osmosis-systems/
You can also spend more.
When we moved into our home, we had a Rainsoft whole house system installed. It costs us close to $10,000 when it was all said and done, and we paid around $350-400 a year to maintain the system before Biden took office.
Think we paid just under $600 this year to replace all the filters, etc. I would not recommend a whole house system to people living paycheck to paycheck.
For sure not getting a whole house filter at that price kek. But the ones under $200 interest me greatly. Thanks for the sauce I'm gonna check it out!
We sold our old home and we used some of the profits to fund that purchase. We wouldn't have been able to purchase it otherwise.
One of the benefits of a whole house system we've discovered is that we now use less soap when taking showers and doing laundry.
As an example, I can use a dime size squirt of shampoo and it lathers up better than 3 times as much shampoo did previously.
We also had Rainsoft's Clean Start system installed, which adds oxygen to the cold water line and allows us to wash nearly all of our clothes in cold water. My wife uses 1/4 of the amount of detergent she did before. Laundry detergent is not cheap so those savings are definitely adding up, especially now thanks to Brandon.