TL;DR: Water treatment in Utah County means matching the fix to the problem: a water softener for scale ($1,500–$4,000 installed, industry estimates), whole-home filtration for taste, odor, and sediment ($1,000–$4,500), reverse osmosis for drinking water ($300–$1,500), and testing to know before you buy. Utah Service Pros designs, installs, and services all four. Call 801-874-8479.
| System | Solves | Installed cost (industry estimates) | Maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water softener | Hardness: scale, appliance wear, stiff laundry | $1,500–$4,000 | Salt refills; resin lasts 10–15 yrs |
| Whole-home filtration | Chlorine taste/odor, sediment, iron | $1,000–$4,500 | Cartridges every 3–12 months |
| Reverse osmosis (under-sink) | Drinking water: TDS, lead, nitrates, taste | $300–$1,500 | Filters yearly; membrane 2–5 yrs |
| Water testing | Knowing exactly what to treat | Free basic hardness test; lab panels vary | Retest after major plumbing work |
How do you choose the right water treatment in Utah County?
Water treatment starts with one question: what is wrong with your water? Scale on fixtures and short-lived water heaters mean hardness — a softener problem. Taste, smell, or cloudy water mean filtration. Concern about what is dissolved in drinking water means reverse osmosis at the kitchen tap. Utah Service Pros tests hardness free at your tap, and the result in grains per gallon (GPG) drives everything that follows.
Why is Utah County water so hard?
Utah County water travels through limestone and dolomite before it reaches the tap, dissolving calcium and magnesium on the way. Municipal supplies across the county broadly test above 180 mg/L of those minerals — the U.S. Geological Survey threshold for “very hard,” roughly 10.5+ GPG. Payson City publishes exact annual figures in its Consumer Confidence Report, and the Utah Division of Drinking Water archives reports for every system in the state. Hardness is not a health problem — the EPA sets no health limit for it — but it is an expensive plumbing problem.
What does hard water cost you if you skip treatment?
Scale insulates water-heater elements and heat exchangers, so heaters burn more energy to deliver the same hot water and fail years early — water heating is already the second-largest energy use in U.S. homes per the U.S. Department of Energy. Scale also chokes aerators, spots glassware, fades laundry, and shortens dishwasher and washer life. In our experience across Payson and Utah County, homes with softened water replace water heaters noticeably less often than homes without.
What does a water softener actually do?
A softener exchanges calcium and magnesium ions for sodium on resin beads, then flushes the captured minerals down the drain during regeneration. Sized correctly — hardness × people × 75 gallons per day — a softener stops new scale completely. Sizing, salt choice, and brine-tank care are covered on the water softener installation page.
When is reverse osmosis worth it?
Reverse osmosis forces water through a membrane that rejects dissolved solids — lead, nitrates, arsenic, and the minerals that survive carbon filtration. An under-sink RO unit treats the water you drink and cook with for $300–$1,500 installed (industry estimates), which is why most Utah County homes pair RO at the kitchen sink with whole-home treatment rather than running RO house-wide.
How do you find out what is in your water?
Start with your city’s Consumer Confidence Report — every public system publishes one annually with hardness, disinfectant levels, and detected contaminants. Then test at your own tap: municipal reports describe water leaving the plant, not what your pipes add. Utah Service Pros runs free hardness tests and arranges certified lab panels when wells or specific contaminants are in question.
Expert-reviewed by Utah Service Pros. Last updated June 2026.