Hard water silently damages appliances, dries out skin, ruins hair, and leaves deposits everywhere. Find your city's water quality report and fix it — for good.
Find Your City Browse ProblemsQuick Answer: Hard water is water with elevated dissolved mineral content — primarily calcium and magnesium — measured in grains per gallon (gpg). The USGS classifies water as hard above 7 gpg and very hard above 10.5 gpg. Approximately 85% of US homes have hard water. Las Vegas, NV (~16–18 gpg) and Phoenix, AZ (~16 gpg) have the hardest municipal water in the US. A salt-based water softener is the most effective treatment for water above 7 gpg.
Hard water is water that contains elevated concentrations of dissolved minerals — primarily calcium (Ca²⁺) and magnesium (Mg²⁺). It forms when water percolates through limestone, chalk, or gypsum deposits, dissolving minerals along the way. Hard water is measured in grains per gallon (gpg) or milligrams per liter (mg/L).
Hardness classifications per USGS Water Science School. Approximately 85% of US homes are supplied with hard water.
| City | Hardness (gpg) | Classification | Primary Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Las Vegas, NV | 16–18 | Extremely Hard | Lake Mead (Colorado River) |
| Phoenix, AZ | ~16 | Extremely Hard | Colorado River / Salt River |
| San Antonio, TX | ~15 | Very Hard | Edwards Aquifer |
| Miami, FL | ~14 | Very Hard | Biscayne Aquifer |
| Houston, TX | ~12 | Very Hard | Trinity River / Lake Livingston |
| Indianapolis, IN | ~12 | Very Hard | White River / Fall Creek |
| Austin, TX | ~11 | Very Hard | Highland Lakes (Colorado River) |
| Dallas, TX | ~10 | Hard | Surface reservoirs (N. Texas) |
| Calgary, AB | ~9 | Hard | Bow & Elbow Rivers |
| Columbus, OH | ~9 | Hard | Scioto River / Hoover Reservoir |
| Chicago, IL | ~8 | Moderately Hard | Lake Michigan |
| Toronto, ON | ~7 | Moderately Hard | Lake Ontario |
| Nashville, TN | ~7 | Moderately Hard | Cumberland River |
| Edmonton, AB | ~7 | Moderately Hard | North Saskatchewan River |
| Denver, CO | ~5 | Moderate | Rocky Mountain snowmelt |
| Jacksonville, FL | ~5 | Moderate | Floridan Aquifer |
| Ottawa, ON | ~4 | Soft–Moderate | Ottawa River |
| Atlanta, GA | ~2 | Soft | Chattahoochee River |
| Seattle, WA | ~1 | Naturally Soft | Cascade Mountains reservoirs |
| Vancouver, BC | ~0.3 | Extremely Soft | Capilano/Seymour reservoirs |
Sources: EPA Annual Water Quality Reports, USGS National Water-Quality Assessment data. gpg = grains per gallon.
Hyperlocal water hardness data, annual report summaries, and tailored solutions for your city.
Phoenix draws from the Colorado River and Salt River, producing some of the hardest municipal water in the US. Learn what's in it and how to protect your home.
Read Phoenix Guide → City Guide ~16–18 gpg — Extremely HardLas Vegas water from Lake Mead is among the hardest in the country. Calcium and magnesium deposits are a major issue for appliances and plumbing.
Read Las Vegas Guide → City Guide ~15 gpg — Very HardSan Antonio relies on the Edwards Aquifer, a naturally mineral-rich groundwater source that produces consistently very hard water year-round.
Read San Antonio Guide → City Guide ~12 gpg — HardIndianapolis water comes from the White River and Fall Creek, with moderate-to-hard water and occasional disinfection byproduct concerns.
Read Indianapolis Guide → City Guide ~5 gpg — Moderate + ChloraminesJacksonville's water is relatively soft but treated with chloramines — a disinfectant that causes taste, odor, and health concerns for sensitive residents.
Read Jacksonville Guide → City Guide ~12 gpg — Very Hard + PFASHouston draws from the Trinity River and Lake Livingston, delivering very hard water with emerging PFAS contamination concerns across Harris County.
Read Houston Guide → City Guide ~8 gpg — Moderately Hard + Lead RiskChicago's Lake Michigan water is moderately hard, but the real concern is lead — the city has more lead service lines than any other US city.
Read Chicago Guide → City Guide ~10 gpg — HardDallas pulls from multiple surface reservoirs across North Texas, with hard water that varies significantly by neighborhood and season.
Read Dallas Guide → City Guide ~5 gpg — Moderate + SnowmeltDenver's snowmelt-sourced water from the Rocky Mountains is relatively soft but faces emerging PFAS concerns and seasonal quality fluctuations.
Read Denver Guide → City Guide ~14 gpg — Very Hard + LimestoneMiami's Biscayne Aquifer produces very hard, mineral-rich water filtered through ancient limestone — great for drinking, rough on appliances.
Read Miami Guide → City Guide ~11 gpg — Hard + Algae RiskAustin's Highland Lakes water supply delivers hard water through limestone geology, with seasonal algae bloom concerns that can affect taste and odor.
Read Austin Guide → City Guide ~7 gpg — Moderately HardNashville's Cumberland River water is moderately hard with chloramine disinfection — a growing concern for fish keepers and sensitive skin.
Read Nashville Guide → City Guide ~9 gpg — Moderately HardColumbus draws from the Scioto River and Hoover Reservoir, with moderately hard water and occasional HAA5 disinfection byproduct elevations.
Read Columbus Guide → City Guide ~1 gpg — Naturally SoftSeattle has some of the softest municipal water in the US — almost no hardness at all. But soft water brings its own challenges for plumbing.
Read Seattle Guide → City Guide ~2 gpg — Soft + InfrastructureAtlanta's Chattahoochee River water is naturally soft, but aging infrastructure and occasional boil-water advisories keep water quality in the news.
Read Atlanta Guide → City Guide • Canada ~7 gpg — Moderately HardCanada’s largest city draws from Lake Ontario. Moderately hard water with an ongoing lead service line replacement program for pre-1955 homes.
Read Toronto Guide → City Guide • Canada ~4 gpg — Soft to ModerateCanada’s capital gets relatively soft water from the Ottawa River. Uses chlorine (not chloramine), making it easy to filter at home.
Read Ottawa Guide → City Guide • Canada ~0.3 gpg — Extremely SoftRainforest-fed mountain reservoirs give Vancouver some of the softest municipal water in North America — but ultra-soft water has its own challenges.
Read Vancouver Guide → City Guide • Canada ~9 gpg — HardRocky Mountain snowmelt feeds Calgary’s Bow and Elbow rivers, producing hard water that varies seasonally — harder in winter, softer after spring melt.
Read Calgary Guide → City Guide • Canada ~7 gpg — Moderately HardEdmonton draws from the North Saskatchewan River, delivering moderately hard water with chloramine disinfection and an active lead pipe replacement program.
Read Edmonton Guide →"Forever chemicals" are in the drinking water of 176 million Americans. The EPA launched its PFAS OUT initiative in April 2026. Here's what you need to know — and what actually removes them.
We compared NSF-certified filters for PFAS removal. Only a handful are independently tested — here are the ones that actually work.
See Our Picks → Filter ComparisonBrita is America's best-selling filter — but it's not certified to remove PFAS. Here's what it actually does (and doesn't) filter.
Read the Honest Answer → Head-to-HeadBoth are popular "serious" filters. But only one holds independent NSF certification for PFAS removal. Here's the full comparison.
Read Comparison → EPA NewsOn April 14, 2026, the EPA launched PFAS OUT — proactive outreach to help ~3,000 water systems reduce PFAS contamination. Here's what it means for you.
Read Explainer → Testing GuideDIY kits vs lab testing — and why home kits can't detect PFAS. Complete guide to knowing exactly what's in your water.
Read Testing Guide →Science-backed explanations of how hard water damages your health, appliances, and daily life — plus how to fix each problem.
Hard water mineral deposits coat hair shafts, disrupt the scalp's pH, and have been linked to increased hair breakage and loss in multiple studies.
Read Guide → HealthResearch from the UK's National Institute for Health shows hard water disrupts the skin barrier and significantly worsens eczema symptoms in children and adults.
Read Guide → AppliancesMineral buildup reduces dishwasher efficiency by up to 30%, leaves white film on dishes, and can cut appliance lifespan in half. Here's how to stop it.
Read Guide → LifestyleMinerals in hard water chemically interfere with coffee extraction, producing flat, bitter, or chalky cups. Even specialty beans can't overcome bad water chemistry.
Read Guide → Well WaterIron-laden well water stains sinks and toilets, tastes metallic, damages appliances, and can harbor iron bacteria. Get the full guide to iron removal.
Read Guide →Research-backed picks for the best water filters — tested against EPA standards and ranked by real-world performance.
What's the actual difference, and which is better for your home? Hardness levels, health effects, appliance impact, and treatment options — explained side by side.
Read the Guide → Buying GuideSpringWell, Aquasana, and iSpring tested and ranked. Expert picks for city water, well water, and hard water homes — with flow rate, contaminant removal, and cost compared.
See Our Picks → Well WaterIron, manganese, hydrogen sulfide, bacteria — well water problems are different from city water. Get matched to the right filtration system for your specific test results.
Find Your Filter →We don't sell water filters. We research water.
Every city guide cites official EPA Consumer Confidence Reports (CCRs) and USGS National Water-Quality Assessment hardness maps. No made-up numbers.
Health guides cite peer-reviewed studies from journals including International Journal of Trichology, Journal of Investigative Dermatology, and WHO water quality guidelines. We explain the science behind hard water effects.
Generic "hard water advice" misses the point. Phoenix draws from the Colorado River at ~16 gpg. Jacksonville uses chloramines at ~5 gpg. We cover your specific city's exact situation.
For each city guide, we:
Last updated: April 2026. Guides are reviewed annually when new EPA CCRs are published.
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Answers based on EPA data, USGS hardness maps, and peer-reviewed research
Hard water contains high concentrations of dissolved minerals — primarily calcium and magnesium. It forms when water flows through limestone, chalk, or gypsum rock. Hardness is measured in grains per gallon (gpg): soft water is under 3.5 gpg, while very hard water exceeds 10.5 gpg. About 85% of US homes are supplied with hard water.
GPG stands for grains per gallon — the standard US unit for measuring water hardness. One grain equals 64.8 milligrams of calcium carbonate per gallon. The USGS hardness scale: 0–3.5 gpg (soft), 3.5–7 gpg (moderately hard), 7–10.5 gpg (hard), above 10.5 gpg (very hard). Phoenix averages 16 gpg (extremely hard); Seattle averages ~1 gpg (naturally soft).
Yes. The World Health Organization states there is no convincing evidence of adverse health effects from drinking hard water. Hard water minerals (calcium and magnesium) can actually contribute to daily mineral intake. The problems are practical: scale buildup on appliances, dry skin, dull hair, and reduced soap lathering. Very hard water can taste bitter or chalky.
The hardest municipal water in the US is found in: Las Vegas, NV (~16–18 gpg), Phoenix, AZ (~16 gpg), San Antonio, TX (~15 gpg), Miami, FL (~14 gpg), Dallas, TX (~10–14 gpg), and Indianapolis, IN (~12 gpg). These cities draw from mineral-rich aquifers or river systems through limestone geology. The softest cities include Seattle, WA (~1 gpg) and Vancouver, BC (~0.3 gpg).
Most water treatment professionals recommend a water softener when hardness exceeds 7 gpg. At 7–10 gpg, scale buildup on appliances and fixtures becomes significant. Above 10 gpg (very hard), a softener is strongly recommended to prevent appliance damage and plumbing scale. Annual appliance repair and energy costs from hard water average over $800 per household.
Common signs of hard water: white or chalky scale buildup on faucets and showerheads, soap that doesn’t lather well, dry skin or itchy scalp after showering, spots on dishes and glassware, reduced water heater efficiency, and shorter appliance lifespans. Test your water with a home hardness test kit ($5–15) or check your city’s free EPA annual water quality report.
Yes, for homes with hard water above 7 gpg. Benefits include: appliance lifespan extended up to 30%, soap usage reduced 50–75%, softer skin and hair, and prevention of scale buildup in pipes. A quality salt-based water softener costs $500–1,500 installed, with ~$100–$200/year in salt costs. Most homeowners in hard water cities recover that investment within 2–3 years through reduced appliance repairs and lower detergent costs.
Water softeners use ion exchange to remove calcium and magnesium (hardness minerals). Water filters use physical or chemical processes to remove contaminants like chlorine, sediment, lead, PFAS, and bacteria. They solve different problems. Most hard water homes benefit from both: a softener for hardness and scale, plus a carbon or RO filter for taste, odor, and chemical contaminants.
Hard water doesn’t directly cause permanent hair loss (alopecia), but research shows it weakens and damages hair. A 2016 study in the International Journal of Trichology found hard water significantly decreased hair tensile strength vs. distilled water. Mineral deposits coat hair shafts, disrupt scalp pH, and worsen dandruff. A KDF or vitamin C shower filter helps reduce these effects for hard water sufferers.
The most effective PFAS removal methods: Reverse osmosis (RO) filters remove 94–99% of PFAS and are NSF/ANSI 58 certified. Activated carbon (GAC) filters remove most PFAS but vary by quality. Ion exchange resins are highly effective for certain PFAS compounds. Standard pitcher filters like Brita are NOT certified to remove PFAS. Always look for NSF/ANSI 58 (RO) or NSF 53 certification.