Nearly 1 in 2 U.S. homes has detectable PFAS. They don’t break down. They build up in your body. And your water utility has years before it’s required to act. NSF-certified filtration removes up to 99% — starting today.
PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a family of over 12,000 synthetic chemicals used in manufacturing since the 1940s. They’re in non-stick cookware, food packaging, firefighting foam, stain-resistant fabrics — and now, in your water.
The carbon-fluorine bond in PFAS is one of the strongest in chemistry. It doesn’t break down in the environment. It doesn’t break down in your body. It accumulates. That’s why they’re called “forever chemicals.”
They enter groundwater through manufacturing runoff, military base firefighting drills, and contaminated landfills — then move into both municipal supplies and private wells.
Many people assume bottled water is PFAS-free. It isn’t — and it creates new problems:
Bottled water trades one contamination risk for another. Filtration is the only solution that addresses both.
Source: EPA, NIH, ATSDR peer-reviewed literature. PFAS exposure does not guarantee these conditions — risk increases with cumulative exposure over time.
The only way to know your PFAS levels is to test your water. Check your utility’s annual Consumer Confidence Report — required by the EPA to list detected contaminants. Well water owners must test independently — there is no mandatory reporting.
Find my water quality report (EPA) →Many filters are marketed for PFAS removal — but independent tests reveal wide variation. Some remove less than 30%. Know what you’re buying.
| Filtration Method | PFAS Removal | NSF Certification | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reverse Osmosis (RO) Gold Standard | 90–99% | NSF/ANSI 58 with specific PFAS claim |
Under-sink, whole-home |
| Whole-House Activated Carbon Good | 70–90% | NSF/ANSI 53 PFOA/PFOS claim required |
Whole-home, long-chain PFAS |
| Ion Exchange Resin High Performance | 85–99% | NSF/ANSI 58 or 53 product-specific |
Commercial, point-of-use |
| Pitcher / Faucet Filters Insufficient | <30–70% | Varies — verify claims | Not recommended as primary PFAS solution |
| Standard Carbon Block Insufficient | Variable | Not PFAS-specific | Not designed for PFAS removal |
Sources: NSF International, Consumer Reports, Quality Water Lab independent testing 2026. Look for NSF/ANSI 58 (RO) or NSF/ANSI 53 with explicit PFAS claims — not just a manufacturer’s marketing statement.
Every system we size and supply is matched to your water chemistry, household size, and flow rate. No guesswork. Expert sizing included.
Installs under your kitchen sink. Removes PFOA, PFOS, GenX, PFBS, and 70+ other contaminants. Clean water at your tap — right now.
Protects every tap, shower, and appliance in your home. Ideal for wells, high-contamination areas, or families who want complete coverage — not just at the kitchen sink.
Effective for PFOA and PFOS removal from the whole home. Best for municipal water with confirmed long-chain PFAS. A strong entry-level whole-home option.
Tell us your water source, household size, and concerns. We’ll size the right system and send you our recommendation by email — no upsell pressure, just the right fit.
Questions? Call 866-560-9808
If you’re on a private well, PFAS regulations don’t apply to you — at all. You are solely responsible for testing and treating your water. Wells near military bases, industrial sites, or agricultural land are at highest risk.
Our water specialists review your water source, contamination concerns, and home size to recommend the correct PFAS filtration system. No upsell. No guesswork.
Public systems have until 2031 to comply with PFAS limits. Your family’s exposure doesn’t pause for regulatory timelines. Filter it today.