Water filtration systems for your office provide great-tasting water at a significantly lower cost than bottled water. Let your Daiohs First Choice rep guide you to the appropriate point-of-use filtration solution.
Water filtration options
• UV purification
• Carbon filtration
• Reverse osmosis
Water filtration advantages
Give your team unlimited access to fresh, clean water for drinking, and for making coffee, tea, soup and ice. And gain even more advantages:
• Remove potential contaminants
• Reduce chemicals affecting water taste and smell
• Improve coffee taste and reduce brewing equipment maintenance
• No more bottle changing or storing
• No more deliveries to manage
• Environmentally friendly
It depends on your specific water. Things to consider include:
• Location in your office – kitchen sink, dedicated filtered water faucet, refrigerator, ice maker, etc.
• Your water issues – scale, dirt and particles, cloudiness, chlorine taste and odor, safety concerns
• Contaminants to be removed – rust, sand, lead, nitrates, bacteria, etc.
• Your water source – city water or private well
• Your budget – Daiohs First Choice offers a range of solutions to meet every budget
Filtered water FAQs
Have additional questions or need more details? We'd love to hear from you — just fill out our web form or contact the branch office in your area.
Yes, lead removal filters are available. Contact your local office for more information.
You likely get your water from a municipal system, aka “city water,” or a private water system—typically a ground water well. Municipalities remove the “big things” like leaves and silt, then disinfect water with chemicals such as chlorine or chloramines. Private wells are maintained by the owners, testing and filtering the water as needed.
If you’re using municipal water, contact your water supplier and request a drinking water quality report. If you’re using well water, it is your responsibility to make sure the water is safe. Contact your local government for more information on what to test for and testing services.
Both are used to disinfect drinking water. Chlorine is an element, used in gaseous or liquid form. Chloramine is formed by adding ammonia to water that has free chlorine. Chloramines produce lower concentrations of regulated disinfection byproducts and provide longer-lasting water treatment than chlorine, but their taste and odor are more difficult to remove via filtration. Water that contains chlorine and/or chloramines and meets EPA regulatory standards is safe to use for drinking and cooking.
Reverse osmosis is the same process used by producers of high-quality bottled water to remove dissolved solids. Water passes through a pre-filter to remove chlorine and sediment, and is then forced through the reverse osmosis membrane. The membrane allows only water molecules to pass through. Processed water flows to a storage tank; the remaining water is flushed down a drain.
Installing a reverse osmosis system at your office brings you great-tasting, filtered water, for a fraction of the cost of bottled water.