- Reduce chlorine, sediment, heavy metals & more
- Improve the taste, smell, and clarity of your tap water
- Protect your plumbing system and water-using appliances
- Eliminate the need for bottled water
- Better skin, hair, and peace of mind

Whole-home water filtration is worth discussing when Palm Beach County homeowners notice taste, odor, scale, or staining issues, or when sensitive household members would benefit from cleaner water at every fixture. The right system depends on the local water profile and the symptom. Climate Control Services can review the home, explain options, and confirm pricing before installation.
If your tap water smells off, tastes funny, or leaves residue on your fixtures, it might be time to filter out the problem. At CCS, we install high-quality whole-home water filtration systems throughout Palm Beach County — giving you clean, safe water from every tap in your house.
Whether you’re dealing with hard water, chlorine, or unknown contaminants, we’ll help you choose the right filtration system and install it with care.
It depends on the local water profile and what the household notices at the tap. Taste, odor, scale on fixtures, and staining are common reasons homeowners look at whole-home filtration. Climate Control Services can review the home and water situation and explain options before recommending a system.
Common options include carbon-based whole-home filters, scale and softening systems, point-of-use filters at the kitchen sink, and combinations of those. The right system depends on what the homeowner is trying to solve.
Most systems need scheduled cartridge or media changes and periodic checks. Skipping those usually reduces filtration quality before the homeowner notices a change at the tap. Climate Control Services can include the system in regular plumbing service so it stays on schedule.
Often yes. Reducing scale and sediment can extend the life of a water heater, especially in homes with hard water. The benefit depends on the existing system condition and the local water profile.
Last updated: March 21, 2026
Reviewed by the Climate Control Services team