Texas Water House
2026-02-12T22:07:06.146Z
I spent a lot of time researching whole-house filtration and softening systems before choosing Texas Water House. If you’re doing your homework, you’ve probably noticed the market is all over the place — from very low-priced installers using off-brand components to large national companies quoting double or even triple for what appears to be similar equipment.What stood out to me about Texas Water House was where they positioned themselves: squarely in the middle on price, but using high-quality components — specifically Clack valves and professional-grade tanks and media. For anyone researching this space, you’ll quickly learn that the control valve and internal components matter just as much as the tank size. Some lower-cost providers cut corners here to win on price.They also use catalytic carbon, which is especially important in the DFW area given the chloramine-treated municipal water. Not all carbon is the same, and catalytic carbon performs significantly better for chlorine/chloramine reduction compared to standard GAC. That was an important detail for me and showed they weren’t just installing a generic, lowest-cost setup.At the same time, some of the larger brand-name companies charge a significant premium for marketing and overhead, even when the core equipment is comparable.Texas Water House struck the right balance. Transparent, technically competent, and willing to answer detailed questions about flow rates, backwash requirements, carbon type, and system sizing. No pressure tactics — just solid engineering and clear explanations.Installation was professional, clean, and on time. The system has performed exactly as expected.If you’re evaluating options, I’d encourage you to look beyond just price and brand name. Ask about the valve manufacturer, media type, and long-term serviceability. For me, Texas Water House delivered quality equipment at a fair price, backed by real expertise.Highly recommend.