Keep in mind, they remove a significant portion of fluoride -- probably more than most filters on the market -- but you cannot remove all of it through filtering. Their own words are, from memory, something like 43% I think.
It's the best option unless you're willing to go nuclear and distilling, as u/Trumpternal is correct to the best of my knowledge, reverse osmosis won't remove all of it either.
Still, Zero Water isn't bad. You can filter a lot of water in a pretty reasonable time frame, and the filters -- for their duration and quality -- aren't too poorly priced. Their pitchers also come in a large variety of sizes, and the included water tester is good for getting a base line on your water and how the filter is doing. Just wash with distilled water between tests.
Keep in mind, they remove a significant portion of fluoride -- probably more than most filters on the market -- but you cannot remove all of it through filtering. Their own words are, from memory, something like 43% I think.
It's the best option unless you're willing to go nuclear and distilling, as u/Trumpternal is correct to the best of my knowledge, reverse osmosis won't remove all of it either.
Still, Zero Water isn't bad. You can filter a lot of water in a pretty reasonable time frame, and the filters -- for their duration and quality -- aren't too poorly priced. Their pitchers also come in a large variety of sizes, and the included water tester is good for getting a base line on your water and how the filter is doing. Just wash with distilled water between tests.