Most of the information available about water filtration focuses on which system to choose. What rarely gets covered is what happens after you have made that choice, and the plumber is scheduled to show up.
The installation process itself is straightforward, but walking into it without knowing how long it takes, whether the water will be off, or what the plumber needs access to can make an otherwise simple day feel unnecessarily stressful.
This blog covers each stage of a professional water filtration installation, what happens at every step, and how to prepare so the day goes smoothly.
The Consultation and Water Assessment
A professional water filtration installation starts before the plumber ever picks up a wrench. The first step is a consultation where the plumber evaluates your home’s water quality, your plumbing layout, and what you want the system to accomplish.
This usually involves a water quality test, either conducted on-site or through a sample sent to a lab, that identifies the specific contaminants present in your water. Hard water minerals, chlorine, sediment, iron, PFAS, or bacteria all require different filtration approaches, and the test results determine which type of system is the right fit. A plumber who recommends a system before testing the water is guessing, and guessing with filtration means you may end up with a system that does not address the specific issues in your supply.
During this visit, the plumber also identifies the best installation point, usually where the main water line enters the home for a whole-home system, and checks whether any plumbing modifications will be needed to accommodate the new equipment. If you are also considering a water softener installation, this is when the plumber determines whether the softener and filtration system should be installed together and in what sequence, since the order of the two systems affects performance.
Preparing for Installation Day
Once the system has been selected and the installation is scheduled, a small amount of preparation on your end helps the day go smoothly.
1. Clear The Installation Area
Most whole-home systems are installed near the main water shutoff, which is typically in the basement, utility room, garage, or crawl space. If that area is being used for storage, moving items away from the installation point gives the plumber room to work and avoids delays.
2. Plan for a Temporary Water Shutoff
The water to your home will need to be turned off during the installation. For most residential jobs, this shutoff lasts between one and three hours, depending on the complexity of the system. If you know the timing, you can plan around it by filling pitchers, running any necessary laundry or dishes beforehand, and letting anyone in the household know when the water will be off and when it will be back on.
3. Ask About Permits if Applicable
Some municipalities require a permit for plumbing modifications. Your plumber should handle this, but confirming it in advance ensures there are no surprises on installation day.
What Happens During the Installation
The installation process follows a predictable sequence, and most residential water filtration installations are completed within a half day.
- The plumber shuts off the main water supply and relieves pressure in the lines
- The section of pipe where the system will be installed is cut and prepared for the new connections
- The filtration unit is mounted, connected to the main water line, and secured in place
- If the system includes a water softener installation alongside the filtration unit, the softener is typically installed first, so incoming water is softened before it reaches the filtration stage
- The water supply is reopened, and the system runs through an initial flush cycle, clearing carbon fines, manufacturing residue, and air from the new filter media
- The plumber checks every connection for leaks, verifies water pressure throughout the home, and confirms the system is operating correctly
Once everything checks out, the installation area is cleaned up, and any cut pipe sections or packaging materials are removed. Most homeowners have full water service restored within a few hours of the plumber’s arrival.
What Happens After the Installation
Before the plumber leaves, they should walk you through how the system works and what ongoing maintenance it requires.
- Filter replacement schedule:
Every filtration system uses filter media that needs to be replaced at regular intervals. The replacement timeline depends on the type of system and your household’s water usage, but most homeowners are looking at filter changes every six to twelve months.
Your plumber will let you know the specific schedule for your system and can either set up a maintenance plan or show you how to handle the replacements yourself.
- Water quality confirmation:
After the system is running, the plumber may test the filtered water to confirm the system is performing as expected. This baseline test gives you a reference point for future comparisons and confirms that the contaminants identified during the initial water assessment are being effectively reduced.
- System documentation:
You should receive documentation that includes the system model, the filter type, and part numbers for future replacements, the installation date, and any warranty information. Keeping this on file makes maintenance and future service straightforward.
Whole-Home vs. Point-of-Use: How Installation Differs
The process described above applies to whole-home systems, which filter all the water entering the home at a single point. Point-of-use systems, such as under-sink reverse osmosis units or countertop filters, follow a simpler installation process.
A point-of-use system is installed at a specific fixture, typically the kitchen sink. The plumber connects the unit to the cold water supply under the sink, installs a dedicated faucet if the system requires one, and runs a shorter flush cycle. The installation is usually completed in under two hours, and the rest of the home’s plumbing is not affected.
Some homeowners choose a combination approach: a whole-home system for general filtration and sediment removal, paired with a point-of-use reverse osmosis unit at the kitchen sink for drinking water that meets a higher filtration standard. A plumber can advise on whether this combination makes sense based on your water quality test results and your household’s priorities.
The Process Is Simpler Than Most Homeowners Expect
Water filtration installation sounds like a major plumbing project, but for most homes, it is a half-day job that follows a clear, predictable process. A consultation identifies what your water needs, the right system is selected and installed at the main line, and a walkthrough at the end ensures you know how to maintain it going forward.
If you have been considering a water filtration installation and want to understand what the process looks like for your specific home, CJM Plumbing, Heating & AC can walk you through it. We have been installing filtration and water softener systems across the Hudson Valley for three generations, and we start every job with a water quality assessment so the system we recommend actually matches what your water contains.
Give us a call to schedule a consultation and find out what the right setup looks like for your home.
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