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WATER QUALITY

Living With Hard Water in Northern Colorado

What hard water quietly does to your pipes, fixtures, and appliances over time.

Much of Northern Colorado’s water supply carries a higher mineral content — mainly calcium and magnesium — which is what “hard water” refers to. It’s safe to drink, but it takes a slow, steady toll on your home’s plumbing that’s easy to miss until it adds up.

Signs you have hard water

  • Spots or film on dishes and glassware after washing
  • Soap that doesn’t lather well and leaves residue
  • A white, chalky buildup around faucets and shower heads
  • Dry skin or dull-feeling hair after showering
  • Reduced flow at fixtures over time

What it does to your plumbing

  • Water heaters accumulate mineral scale inside the tank, reducing efficiency and shortening the unit’s life.
  • Pipes can narrow over years as scale builds up on interior walls, especially in older galvanized piping.
  • Fixtures & appliances — faucets, shower heads, dishwashers, and washing machines — wear out faster and lose performance as minerals clog small passages.

What helps

  • A water softener removes the minerals before they reach your plumbing, protecting everything downstream.
  • Regular water heater flushing clears sediment before it becomes a bigger problem.
  • Cleaning aerators and shower heads periodically restores flow lost to mineral buildup.

Is a softener worth it?

If you’re already seeing spots, film, or reduced flow, a whole-home softener typically pays for itself over time in extended appliance life and fewer repairs — on top of the day-to-day difference in how your water feels and how well soap and detergent work.

Ready to fight hard water?

See our water softener & filtration page for options.

Water Softener & Filtration

Curious what a softener would cost you?

Call and we’ll talk through the right size and system for your home.

(970) 457-5970