Frisco's municipal water averages 15–25 grains per gallon of hardness — that's classified as very hard. It's silently scaling your water heater, clouding your fixtures, drying out your skin, and shortening the life of every appliance in your home.
We'll test your water on-site and show you exactly what's in it. Takes 20 minutes.
Frisco's extreme hardness creates thick calcium deposits inside your water heater, reducing efficiency by up to 30% and cutting its lifespan in half. Homes built during Frisco's 2012–2018 construction boom are especially vulnerable.
Hard water strips natural oils from your skin and hair. Families in Frisco often notice itchy skin, dull hair, and eczema flare-ups — especially in children — that resolve within days of installing a whole-home system.
The North Texas Municipal Water District treats Frisco's supply with chlorine and chloramines. Our multi-stage carbon filtration removes these chemicals, along with sediment and emerging contaminants like PFAS.
Frisco says it receives treated water from the North Texas Municipal Water District. NTMWD identifies Lavon Lake as its largest water source, with additional regional supply sources supporting member and customer cities.
Hardness minerals are the main reason Frisco homeowners notice scale on faucets, shower glass, water heaters, and appliances. Softening is the treatment path for mineral scale.
Whole-home carbon filtration is commonly used when homeowners want to reduce chlorine taste and odor before water reaches showers, laundry, and kitchens.
Read the DFW Water Quality Guide or review the Frisco water supply reference.
From new construction in Fields to established communities in Stonebriar — we know Frisco's water.
Frisco's municipal water supply averages 15 to 25 grains per gallon (GPG), which is classified as "very hard" by USGS standards. This causes significant scale buildup in water heaters, dishwashers, and plumbing fixtures throughout your home.
Frisco receives its water from the North Texas Municipal Water District (NTMWD), which sources water primarily from Lavon Lake and Lake Texoma. The water is treated with chlorine/chloramines for disinfection, which is why many Frisco homeowners notice a chlorine taste and odor.
For most Frisco homes, both are recommended. Softening addresses the extreme hardness (calcium and magnesium), while carbon filtration removes chlorine, sediment, and chemical contaminants. Our free in-home test shows you exactly what combination your home needs.
Most whole-home systems are installed in 2 to 4 hours, typically in the garage. We handle everything — your family will have pure, filtered water the same evening. We service all Frisco ZIP codes including 75033, 75034, and 75035.
Every install includes a TDS meter so you can verify the water quality yourself. If your water does not test measurably purer within 30 days, we remove the system and refund you in full. No questions asked.
Book a free, no-obligation in-home water test. We'll show you exactly what's in your water and what it's doing to your home. Takes 20 minutes.
Book My Free Water Test →