Chlorine Removal in Granite Hills, CA.
Chlorine Removal for Granite Hills homes, done by licensed San Diego County technicians. San Diego treats its water with chloramine, a compound of chlorine and ammonia used by many large water utilities because it persists longer in the distribution system than free chlorine. The EPA regulates chloramine as an approved disinfectant in drinking water, but that persistence means the disinfectant is still active in your tap water.
What chlorine removal looks like in Granite Hills
Municipal water customers in Granite Hills receive chloramine-treated water from the county distribution system, and the chemical taste and odor it carries is amplified in the shower when hot water releases it as vapor. Our whole-house catalytic carbon stage is designed specifically for chloramine and is sized for each home's flow rate so the disinfectant load is removed before the water reaches any fixture. Well customers in Granite Hills are not on chloramine but may face their own disinfection or organic load depending on the well source.
What's included in chlorine removal in Granite Hills?
- Free in-home water test confirming your disinfectant type, chlorine or chloramine, and baseline levels
- Catalytic carbon media selection matched to chloramine removal, not generic activated carbon
- Medical-grade 304/316 stainless steel tanks, no plastic liners that can degrade
- Whole-house installation so every shower, tap, and appliance gets treated water
- Point-of-use configurations for households who want kitchen-tap treatment only
- Sediment pre-filtration to extend catalytic carbon media life
- Post-install water test to confirm chloramine levels after treatment
- Media replacement service on a set schedule
When does a Granite Hills home need chlorine removal?
- Your tap water smells like chlorine or a swimming pool
- You notice a chemical taste in your water even when it has been refrigerated overnight
- Your fish tank or hydroponic system is sensitive to chloramine and standard dechlorinators are not working
- You are concerned about long-term chloramine exposure in bathing water
- You already have a carbon filter but are still noticing taste and odor issues
- A water test confirmed chloramine is present and you want it addressed throughout the home
What do Granite Hills homeowners ask about chlorine removal?
How soon can you get to Granite Hills for a free water test?
We usually schedule the free in-home water test in Granite Hills within a few business days. The test takes about an hour, a technician tests your actual water and shows you the results in plain terms, and a real person answers the phone, not a dispatcher.
What does chlorine removal cost in Granite Hills?
Chloramine removal systems are sized based on household flow rate and water usage. Exact pricing after your free in-home water test. Financing is available. We give you an exact written price after the free in-home water test, with no mileage upcharge for Granite Hills and financing available. No pressure, no surprise line items.
How does Granite Hills's climate affect this service?
Granite Hills is semi-rural East County foothills with some of the hardest water in the county and significant private well inventory. Municipal customers face very hard water with aggressive scale. Well customers on the upper slopes and rural edges deal with iron, sulfur, sediment, and hardness in combination. Inland summer heat over 100°F makes scale accumulation in appliances worse. Municipal water customers in Granite Hills receive chloramine-treated water from the county distribution system, and the chemical taste and odor it carries is amplified in the shower when hot water releases it as vapor.
Why does San Diego use chloramine instead of chlorine?
Chloramine forms fewer disinfection byproducts than free chlorine, which helps utilities meet federal standards. It also lasts longer in the distribution system, which is useful for a large, spread-out delivery network like San Diego County. From a treatment standpoint, the tradeoff is that chloramine is harder to remove at the tap.
Why does my standard carbon filter not remove chloramine?
Standard granular activated carbon removes free chlorine readily through adsorption. Chloramine molecules have a different structure and do not adsorb as easily. Catalytic carbon has a modified surface chemistry that accelerates the breakdown of chloramine. If your existing filter uses standard GAC, it is likely not performing on chloramine.
Where we work in Granite Hills
Need chlorine removal in Granite Hills?
Call for a free in-home water test. Same-day service on most repairs, next-day on most installs.