Best facuet mount water filters according to redditors

We found 73 Reddit comments discussing the best facuet mount water filters. We ranked the 22 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Faucet Mount Water Filters:

u/TardCart · 75 pointsr/AskReddit

Pelican waterproof laptop and gun cases. Heavy, pricey...but waterproof, durable as hell, and with a lifetime warranty.

Android phone - with Swype, and LogMeIn Ignition (if you need it for your job).

A Thermarest self-inflating sleeping pad...great for camping, or crashing at a friend's place, or living without furniture (though the bed-in-a-box someone mentioned is also sweet and pretty much a necessity if you've got a gf/bf...I ordered the queen sized from Walmart and it was perfect).

Wire shelving/carts. I buy the commercial-grade ones at Lowes Hardware with the big casters (wheels) and use them for TV/computer stands, easily-moved storage, etc. Some of them fit easily in closets and make great clothing-organizers (haven't had a stupid heavy 'dresser' in over a decade). When you move you can use them to transport your stuff to your vehicle, to an elevator, etc., and they make great furniture dollies too.

Outdoor remote power switches...the outdoor models are 3-prong and the indoor ones are usually 2-prong (and thus useless). Plug a power strip into one of these and hook all your computer stuff to that...button press turns all those 'vampire' power adapters and bright LEDs completely off.

Kleen Kanteen...stop buying bottled water and drinking out of plastic. Whether it's 'BPA free' or not, stuff just tastes better out of clean stainless steel and it lasts forever. Buy a Brita filter (or pitcher) if your tap water tastes like crap.

Kindle is the second-most useful gadget I've owned (after my Android phone).

And, finally, the best lube you'll ever find is Wet Platinum (silicone based). The stuff lasts forever and never gets sticky.

u/NeoNerd · 18 pointsr/skeptic

The EPA allows chlorine levels up to 4ppm (parts per million) in tap water. However, a normal swimming pool is at around this level. Most water is much lower. As a gas, chlorine becomes detectable at around 3ppm. At 30ppm, people start to cough and possibly vomit. At 60ppm lung damage happens. So unless your mother feels very ill after each shower, there's not a problem.

Even if your family are concerned, you can buy filtering faucets and shower heads for a fraction of the cost asked by this man. They cost around $25 for a shower head and about the same for a filter for a faucet. $10,000 is scam territory.


u/bentekkie · 8 pointsr/wlu

Get a tap Britta filter, when I lived at UP that helped a ton https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B000EOOQPW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_aOyHDb3SRBA7J

u/Poutine_My_Mouth · 8 pointsr/canada

This one by Pur. I have to replace the filter every few months, but it's pretty much eliminated any chlorine flavor from my tap water.

u/Combative_Douche · 6 pointsr/legaladvice

Why do you feel you are entitled to an in-fridge water filter? Most people don't have one. It's a luxury. If filtered water is so important to you, get one for your sink. This one is like 20 bucks.

u/drovix · 3 pointsr/AskReddit

I got one of these Tap Water Filters and I drink WAY more water now that it doesn't taste like balls; before I'd just get drinks or large amounts of tea/purple drink. Saves you the calories and is better for you.

u/xilvar · 3 pointsr/NoStupidQuestions

Many water filters work well at removing lead and other impurities. I'm fond of the culligan faucet mount filter. Bought it for the second time recently in California when they used some weird algae tasting water for a while.

https://www.amazon.com/Culligan-FM-15A-Advanced-Faucet-Filter/dp/B00006WNMI

u/fingers-crossed · 3 pointsr/LosAngeles

Probably more trouble than it's worth to get your landlord to do anything about it. Grab one of these and call it a day.

u/frawgster · 3 pointsr/sanantonio

We've had decent luck with a PUR filter attached to our faucet.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0009CEKY6/

I don't mind the taste of City water, but my wife doesn't care for it, so we installed a faucet filter a couple of years ago. I won't lie though, the PUR filter doesn't eliminate the mineral taste entirely. If I had to put a percentage on it, I'd say it removes about 90% of the taste.

u/zxcsd · 3 pointsr/todayilearned
u/clem78 · 3 pointsr/Home

Of all the major brands of faucet filters I've bought, this is the only one that has never sprung a leak. and the filters are pretty affordable too through amazon subscribe and save.
http://www.amazon.com/Culligan-FM-15A-Level-Faucet-Filter/dp/B00006WNMI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1381619939&sr=8-1&keywords=culligan+fm-15a

u/YaztromoX · 3 pointsr/VictoriaBC

For the short term, get yourself an on-tap water filter for your kitchen sink. This way you can at least clean out water for drinking and food preparation purposes.

u/B0Bi0iB0B · 3 pointsr/news

And with an initial investment of $15.58, and a maximum of $9.68 every 3 months (cheaper in bulk) you can filter it at your house and have better than most bottled waters. Really cheap and effective solutions are out there, but it seems that people are either willfully ignorant or just want something to complain about.

u/Lars--Himself · 2 pointsr/canada

Here's a link to the Canadian Amazon, because y'know, this is /r/canada

u/indetermin8 · 2 pointsr/pittsburgh

Yup. Replacing all my lines, while sounding like a fun DIY project, won't be happening soon.

Different levels of filtration are going to be in my future. First up will be a faucet filter. I actually hate those, but they can go on quickly enough and will work long enough until I can figure out what I do want. 3M's undersink Filtrete system sounds good to me if it were actually in stock.

u/Endall · 2 pointsr/HerbGrow

This was the filter, xandarg recommended it. Seems to working fine. Really slow though compared to before. My tap water is only 40ppm? So besides the chloramine it is pretty good.

I might buy RO/distilled by the gallon in the future like you've suggested when I get into living soil or hydro. Right now i'm still using liquid nutrients but with my new plants i'm going to try some worm castings tea. So i'll want to get rid of the chloramine for that. I'll be doing some comparisons though to see if the type of water is really making that much of a difference with my garden when it comes to the tea.

u/Vinnyb1322 · 2 pointsr/MustHaveThis

Pretty standard faucet water filter.

Can be yours for just $14 with prime shipping.

u/pointblankjustice · 2 pointsr/DIY

The sink I scored off craigslist for $25. It's just a little 10x12 bar sink. External dimensions are 15x15. The faucet is a cheap little auxiliary faucet you'd use with an RO system or something. Here is a similar one.

u/nochefebril · 2 pointsr/mexico

Si, es un filtro PUR comprado en Amazon, ahí también compro los filtros. Esta instalado en el grifo de la cocina. Tuve que poner una llave más alta para que cupiera bien. El filtro es como este:

Pur pfm450s acero inoxidable estilo Horizontal FM, Montaje de grifo, Horizontal, Stainless Steel Style https://www.amazon.com.mx/dp/B01LWLJD83/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_WZcWAbQRNHB2J

Cambio el filtro cada 2 a 3 meses. La verdad le quita los sabores de cloro y el agua sabe muy bien pero bajo la suposición de que el agua es potable. Si no fuera potable no seria opción.

u/DucoNihilum · 2 pointsr/AskReddit

http://www.amazon.com/Culligan-FM-15A-Level-Faucet-Filter/dp/B00006WNMI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1324416010&sr=8-1

Upfront cost - ~19 dollars

Maintenance cost - ~12 dollars per 200 gallons

http://www.amazon.com/Culligan-FM-15RA-Faucet-Replacement-Cartridge/dp/B00006WNMJ/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1324416010&sr=8-4

Meaning... the filter can provide you with 1,514 individual bottles of water. So unless this water comes out to 18 cents per 24 pack you are NOT saving anything.

u/joecamel_ · 2 pointsr/BuyItForLife

This is what we use.

Our kitchen sink has a strong chlorine taste without it. Works well.

It's mostly for my cats, so it lasts longer than if it was for everyone here.

You replace the filter 8-12 months depending on use.

u/sadstarfish · 2 pointsr/AsianBeauty

I'm looking for water filter recommendations for my faucet to see if my water might be cause of some of the skin issues I've been having. So far I've only looked at PUR water filters on Amazon because I don't know anything about water filters and they are the only ones I've heard of. I'm not really sure what's the difference between the [basic] (https://www.amazon.com/PUR-Black-Basic-Vertical-Faucet/dp/B009V9K6BY/ref=sr_1_3?s=hi&ie=UTF8&qid=1474066604&sr=1-3&keywords=pur+faucet+water+filter), [2-step] (https://www.amazon.com/PUR-FM-3333B-2-Stage-Vertical-Faucet/dp/B0007ZYUA4/ref=sr_1_2?s=hi&ie=UTF8&qid=1474066604&sr=1-2&keywords=pur+faucet+water+filter), and [advanced] (https://www.amazon.com/Advanced-Faucet-Filter-Chrome-FM-3700B/dp/B0009CEKY6/ref=sr_1_8?s=hi&ie=UTF8&qid=1474066604&sr=1-8&keywords=pur+faucet+water+filter) filtration systems. I will not be drinking this water, as I already have another system installed in my kitchen for that. Any advice/recommendations would be appreciated. If there's another sub where someone can direct me for more specific information, that is also appreciated! Thanks!

u/Sarstan · 2 pointsr/Bakersfield

That's less about the region and more about how it's being stored. You'll want to double check your containers are sealing properly and that your refrigerator is staying a proper temperature.
If you're concerned about the water, which isn't going to be much better or worse than most places in California, get a filter on your tap. I have something very similar to this on my faucet for drinking water. It's not that the water is unsafe to drink, but more so it does have tastes in it that I want out. Either way, those filters can be found in any major department store for sure, or even something like Home Depot or Lowe's.

u/jglol · 2 pointsr/LosAngeles

http://www.amazon.com/PUR-Black-Basic-Vertical-Faucet/dp/B009V9K6BY/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=undefined&sr=8-1&keywords=pur+faucet+filter+black

I've been using it for about a year. Haven't changed the filter yet - it started blinked red a while ago [indicating filter change], but I've been riding it out and haven't tasted a difference.

u/LesliW · 2 pointsr/BuyItForLife

We have really bad water and have been really happy with this one.

Culligan FM-15A Advanced Faucet Filter Kit https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00006WNMI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_sb0MxbKYDENHH

We bought several of the ones that just snap onto your faucet and every one ended up leaking and turning into a mini-water-fountain within a few weeks. This one actually screws on, so it takes a minute to put on/take off, but it works SO MUCH BETTER. Been using it daily for two years now, and it's under $30.

u/isanyonekeepingtrack · 2 pointsr/explainlikeimfive

Only if they say they're rated to do as such. This one makes no mention of lead so I would assume not. Also, you may find pitcher filters are annoyingly slow. You're better off getting a faucet attached filter, even their standard filters are rated for 99% lead removal. They take about a minute to install.

u/ThanksObama44 · 1 pointr/Coffee

Just bought one of these and it works great! Knocks out virtually all contaminates and leaves your water tasting awesome.

u/Sarahsaei754 · 1 pointr/SkincareAddiction

Culligan FM-25 Faucet Mount Filter with Advanced Water Filtration, Chrome Finish https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0064MKTE0/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_lxHbMTdXgIXjt


CaptainEco 10-Stage Shower Filter with 2 Replacement Cartridges Universal Chrome https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01M03C6PO/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apip_2gOs6zFEljlNS

u/ItsACharlieDay · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

retail therapy

I think you're going to get the culligan water faucet filter since you have less hours this would be sensible so you have the cleanest water... Idk

u/mki401 · 1 pointr/lancaster

Just buy a tap filter for $20. I have this one and love it.

u/similarityhedgehog · 1 pointr/espresso

Looking at the plumbing for a 3 group linea classic, I'm not seeing why you wouldn't be able to plumb it yourself. The lines needed are the same as if you bought an under-sink water filter, something like this: https://www.amazon.com/Filtrete-Performance-Drinking-Dedicated-4US-MAXL-S01/dp/B00910U03W

All you do is shut off your cold water line to your kitchen sink, disconnect it, put in a T splitter

u/purebredginger · 1 pointr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

My sincerest condolences for your loss =( Losing someone suddenly is incredibly difficult to deal with.

Something that would be incredibly awesome to have would be a PUR water filter. I'm trying to get healthy and a lot of that has to do with drinking more fluids, especially more water, but I hate tap water where I live. It is hard and I can see the minerals and grit in it. Something else that would be great is a laundry hamper. Something that helps keep my anxiety down is having a clean room/apartment and a sorting laundry hamper would save a lot of time. Finally, I love cooking and might even open a restaurant one day, so this knife would be great to have =)

Thanks for such an amazing contest and I hope you get your debit card soon!!!! Sort my priorities!

u/rjcarr · 1 pointr/funny

OK, that makes sense. You can buy one of those filters that goes directly onto your tap if the container filters don't hold enough water. Something like this:

http://www.amazon.com/Culligan-FM-15A-Level-Faucet-Filter/dp/B00006WNMI

Before putting the work in to install though I'd recommend trying a simple container filter to make sure you approve of the taste.

u/s0briquet · 1 pointr/washingtondc

I feel you, and that's why I use one of these filters. Totally worth the price. I live in a WWII-era building, and not only is the water full of iron, but it's got particulates in it as well (sediment).

u/semiotist · 1 pointr/Coffee

Did you ever consider a faucet mounted filter. It's faster and more convenient than a pitcher while still cheaper than a reverse osmosis system.

Bonus question: I now use a variable temp bonavita kettle so I can set it to any temperature I want but before that I would usually wait till 20 seconds off a boil.

edit: I only have personal experience with the pur filter linked above and I loved it until it cracked. However reading the reviews as pointed out by allwoundup I've discovered this isn't an uncommon occurence. So you may want to consider a different model like a culligan or Dupont. However I haven't had any personal experience with these models so I can't vouch for them.

u/albatrek · 1 pointr/cmu

I live in an apartment near campus. I read the Pittsburgh water report when I moved in and immediately bought one of the water filters that goes on your sink faucet. The free lead test from Pittsburgh would have taken several weeks and sounded really inconvenient - they drop off bottles outside your building, you have to get them and fill them and leave them to get picked up - I wasn't sure how that would work in an apartment building. The other option for testing is buying your own test kit, but a quality test kit is more expensive than a quality filter, and, based on reviews, a lot of them aren't all that accurate. (although also consider that the filter will need to be replaced periodically - in the long run, it is more expensive than a test kit)

For anyone who doesn't want to read the report, Pittsburgh (14.8 µg/L in 2015) is just under the level at which a city is supposed take action for lead (15 µg/L). So, not technically awful, but kinda scary. Hence my filter :) I got this one. It was $20 and well-reviewed by Consumer Reports.

source

u/cantletthatstand · 1 pointr/Anarcho_Capitalism

One of these.

u/DarthContinent · 1 pointr/LosAngeles

I live in Florida and we have relatively hard city water, our PUR filter does very well at removing the chlorine taste. Haven't tried it with well water, however; some friends of ours though have a well and water softener system and that makes it quite drinkable if just a bit salty.

u/Esther_Weathersby · 1 pointr/tea

If you don't have good tap water, invest in a PÜR filter that can be attached directly to the tap. In order to brew a great cup of tea, you must start with good quality water. The water in my apartment is very hard and had a terrible mineral taste to it, and so I made a small investment into a good water filter, and it makes much better tea.

The temperature of water that you use will also effect the outcome of your tea. Some teas, like green and white, need lower water temperatures than black and oolong teas. This is where a variable temperature kettle comes in handy. I bought mine on Amazon for only $35, and it can be programmed to brew to a specific water temperature.

As far as the teas go, I'm sure others have mentioned this, but using quality loose leaf tea is the way to go. Tea bags are filled with poor quality "tea dust", and won't taste very nice. Try purchasing some fresh loose leaf tea samplers from online vendors. Check out the vendor list or Marketing Monday thread we have on /r/tea for some ideas.

Lastly, check out Mei Leaf's brewing guide for an idea on how to brew your tea.

u/sanfran54 · 1 pointr/ZeroWaste

I've been using a Brita like this for several years and it works well for me. I normally fill a couple of gallon jugs with it to keep in the fridge. I remove it afterwords as I find it a bit bulky. I too live in an apartment where other options won't work.

u/sandiegopic · 1 pointr/Aquariums

It could just be small pieces of debris from your tap, you could try one of these Waterdrop 320-Gallon Long-Lasting Water Faucet Filtration System with Ultra Adsorptive Material, Faucet Water Filter -Fits Standard Faucets https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GABXWCK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_cBxJBbV60TYKF

u/vikramdesh1 · 1 pointr/nova
u/ferengiprophet · 1 pointr/WaterTreatment

I'm on a budget at the moment so I need something with a lower upfront cost. I looked around and saw that PUR has a system for $24. Would you recommend this?

u/emperorisnaked7 · 1 pointr/nature

I never said to repeal it. Repealing it would be bad. I don't support Trump or Obama. Also, I don't believe those filters completely filter out the lead. At best it's 99.x%, but that's from a really nice filter. What kind of filters did they get? Also, they are still showering in the water. What do you have to say about that? Did they also give everyone shower filters?

I found the first filter crappy that they offer: https://www.amazon.com/Brita-Basic-Faucet-Filter-System/dp/B000EOOQPW/?ie=UTF8&qid=1498673099&sr=8-3&keywords=brita+saff-100

This one is much better that they offer: https://www.amazon.com/PUR-3-Stage-Advanced-7-7-Inch-3-2-Inch/dp/B0009CEKY6/?ie=UTF8&qid=1498673366&sr=8-1&keywords=pur+faucet+mount+fm-3700b

And they offer this too, which I think would be needed: https://www.amazon.com/ZeroWater-Cup-Dispenser-Meter-ZD-018/dp/B003QXM3U8/?ie=UTF8&qid=1498673456&sr=8-1&keywords=ZeroWater+23-Cup+Dispenser+ZD-018

u/firestorm_v1 · 1 pointr/Plumbing

it's a water filter that attaches to the sink faucet, kinda like this one:

http://www.amazon.com/PUR-Advanced-Faucet-Filter-FM-3700B/dp/B0009CEKY6

u/headbobbin_ichabod · 1 pointr/GifRecipes
u/MaximilianKohler · 1 pointr/news

Beyond testing you can also buy these 3 stage water filters: http://www.amazon.com/PUR-Advanced-Faucet-Filter-FM-3700B/dp/B0009CEKY6

Not too expensive.

u/Binsky89 · 1 pointr/mildlyinteresting

Have you tried a Culligan filter? In my old town the tap water tasted like drinking out of a swimming pool, but the filter made it 100% better.

u/lovethebacon · 1 pointr/news

I was wondering about using a filter. Choosing a random one, it costs $12.67, and needs replacement after 200 gallons. I have no clue how much it reduces lead, or if it'll even bring Flint's lead levels down to safe levels.

Filtration cost per gallon is $0.06495, including the cost of the water per gallon.

Another one has a per-gallon cost of $0.03487.

I was under the impression that water filters were expensive, but surprisingly per-gallon they're not. Obviously I'm taking the cost of the replacement filters rather than the full kits themselves. Per gallon cost is just a little bit more taking into account the initial spend to buy the kit.

u/midnitewarrior · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

This is the cheapest / best / easiest option I found when I switched to filtered water. It takes out the chlorine flavor. It's really easy to install, and it works well.

u/BioSim00 · 1 pointr/AskReddit

True, but it really isn't that much of a hassle to buy a filter, or a filtered pitcher and not only cut down on waste but save yourself some money as well.

u/waterdeptguy · 1 pointr/shutupandtakemymoney

You can get an NSF certified water filter for under $20. Among other things, NSF certification ensures that the filtrate and hardware do not contain unsafe levels of lead and that the filter actually removes what it claims it removes (primarily testing for cryptosporidium, giardia cysts, lead, and chlorine).

u/missmercy87 · 0 pointsr/Random_Acts_Of_Amazon

water filter


Thanks!!!!! :D:D:D

Really, on a Monday?

u/apullin · -2 pointsr/news

Except a $14 Brita filter does filter out lead.

Did you not know that, and just made the claim anyway? Or did you know that, and just purposely misrepresented it?

u/Mcheetah2 · -2 pointsr/mildlyinteresting

That's what water filters are for. They're like $20.